
Location:
United States
Genres:
Education Podcasts
Networks:
WHYY
Description:
Episodes for The Connection with Marty Moss-Coane
Language:
English
Episodes
How our primal intelligence gives us an edge over AI
11/7/2025
Angus Fletcher argues our capacity for creativity, flexibility and story thinking gives humans a leg up over artificial intelligence.
Duration:00:50:27
Long-distance swimmer Diana Nyad gets real about living her best life
10/31/2025
Diana Nyad reflects on her historic swim from Cuba to Florida, lessons of forgiveness, and the challenges and pleasures of aging.
Duration:00:50:13
The joy of being alone: why we all need solitude
10/24/2025
Psychologist Robert Coplan on the restorative power of being alone.
Duration:00:49:59
NPR’s Scott Simon on journalism, empathy and a good cup of espresso
10/17/2025
The Weekend Edition Saturday host talks about the state of journalism, covering war-torn regions, an awkward interview with Billy Cosby and a hilarious one with Dame Edna.
Duration:00:50:01
Redefining normal: autism, stigma and culture
10/10/2025
Anthropologist Roy Richard Grinker on the progress in understanding autism, the ongoing efforts to overcome mental health stigma, and the need to dispel persistent myths.
Duration:00:50:00
Jean Twenge’s rules for raising kids in a high-tech world
10/3/2025
Psychologist Jean Twenge -- a mother of three -- gives parents the tools they need to help their kids develop a healthier relationship with social media.
Duration:00:49:58
Linguist John McWhorter on free speech, woke language, and why words matter
9/26/2025
A conversation with Columbia University linguist and author John McWhorter on the power of language, the dangers of censorship, and the evolution of slang and swearing.
Duration:00:49:58
Fawning and the dangers of people-pleasing
9/19/2025
Clinical psychologist Ingrid Clayton used fawning as a coping strategy growing up in a scary home. It helped her in those frightening moments but came at a terrible price.
Duration:00:50:01
The Neuroscience of decision-making
9/12/2025
Why don’t we always prioritize what matters most—like making time for family and friends or fitting in a workout during a busy day? Emily Falk believes that understanding how our brain works can help us make better, more intentional choices.
Falk is a professor of communication, psychology, and marketing at the University of Pennsylvania, where she directs the Communication Neuroscience Lab. Her new book, What We Value: The Neuroscience of Choice and Change, explores how different regions of the brain shape the big and small decisions we make every day.
Duration:00:50:01
How COVID changed everything
9/5/2025
NYU sociologist Eric Klinenberg reflects on lessons learned and not learned from the COVID pandemic and the ways it changed our lives, culture and politics.
Duration:00:50:00
Music and memory
8/29/2025
Princeton professor Elizabeth Margulis explains why music has the power to affect our emotions, transport us to far away places and connect us to others.
Duration:00:49:59
Your brain on psychedelics with Gül Dölen
8/20/2025
Psychedelic drugs have gained some attention in recent years and neuroscientists are doing fascinating work. Some research includes octopuses on MDMA. We'll get the latest.
Duration:00:50:00
Do you want to live forever? The Mortality Paradox
8/13/2025
Philosopher Stephen Cave on our struggles with our mortality, and how knowing we will die one day can make life precious and even more meaningful.
Duration:00:50:48
Climate scientist Kate Marvel…how to feel about our changing planet
8/8/2025
Are you feeling hopeless about the warming planet? Climate scientist Kate Marvel says it’s natural to feel scared and angry but there’s also reasons to hope.
Duration:00:50:25
Spellbound: the power and paradox of charisma
8/1/2025
In her new book "Spellbound," historian Molly Worthen explains how charisma is more about storytelling than charm.
Duration:00:50:48
Edward Hirsch on poetry, comedy and “My Childhood in Pieces”
7/25/2025
Poet Edward Hirsch on his complicated and colorful Jewish Midwestern family and childhood where comedy was a competitive sport.
Duration:00:50:25
What to know about living and working with AI
7/18/2025
Ethan Mollick’s guidelines of using AI: “always invite AI to the table, be the human in the loop, treat AI like a person and assume this is the worst AI you will ever use.”
Duration:00:50:23
Gisele Barreto Fetterman on ‘Radical Tenderness’
7/11/2025
Gisele Barreto Fetterman on her childhood as an undocumented immigrant, her life now in the public eye, and why vulnerability is a source of strength.
Duration:00:49:59
A self-help skeptic on finding contentment and embracing our imperfections
7/4/2025
Author Oliver Burkeman on why it's time to settle for your imperfections and ditch the relentless self-help messaging of productivity and control.
Duration:00:50:48
Cracking the creativity code
6/27/2025
Psychologist John Kounios on our creative brain and those “eureka moments.” Plus, how composer Jennifer Higdon channels her creativity into her music.
Duration:00:50:01