Episode Archive
15 episodes of It's Innate! since the first episode, which aired on 4 July 2020.
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It's Innate Ep. 15: Does alcohol make for worse mommies?
25 February 2022 | 1 hr 27 mins
alcohol dependence, correlational research, developmental mechanisms, observational research
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It's Innate Ep. 14: Birds of a Feather... Share Saliva?
19 February 2022 | 1 hr 51 mins
empiricism vs. nativism, evolutionary psychology, learning mechanisms
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It's Innate Ep. 13: Is Developmental Psychology a Fool's Errand?
22 January 2022 | 1 hr 1 min
developmental psychology, infancy, qrps
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It's Innate Ep. 12: When empiricists and a nativist meet...
17 September 2021 | 1 hr 33 mins
empiricist, innate, mechanism, morality, nativist
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It's Innate Ep. 11: Is it too early to say that I'm sorry? Perhaps not.
5 September 2021 | 1 hr 35 mins
forgiveness, morality, research opportunities
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It's Innate Ep. 10: That's just a bunch of nonsense you jive turkey
24 May 2021 | 1 hr 15 mins
language learning, mechanism, statistical learning
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It's Innate Ep. 9: Nothin' but some long-hair, baldheaded faces (with Charisse Pickron)
11 December 2020 | 1 hr 51 mins
face perception, individuation, infant
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It's Innate Ep. 8: Don't judge a wagden by its category label (with Lisa Scott)
22 October 2020 | 1 hr 45 mins
category acquisition, category learning, face processing, label learning
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It's Innate Ep. 7: Is poking the cat causal? (with Jonathan Kominsky)
10 October 2020 | 1 hr 55 mins
causal modules, causal perception, causality, habituation, infancy
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It's Innate Ep. 6: Do children theorize about academic performance? (with Melis Muradoğlu)
19 September 2020 | 1 hr 27 mins
academic performance, intuitive theories, testing during the pandemic
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It's Innate Ep. 5: A positive take on the "positivity bias" (with Janet Boseovski)
2 September 2020 | 1 hr 29 mins
children, learning mechanisms, positivity bias, social learning
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It's Innate Ep. 4: What's morals got to do with it?
19 August 2020 | 1 hr 42 mins
prosocial, replication, social learning, sociomoral evaluations
In second segment, Candy and Deon discuss Kiley Hamlin's classic study on infants' developing sociomoral evaluations as well as a recent replication attempt of the original study. Candy and Deon also discuss whether the claim that infants possess a "innate moral core" (Hamlin, 2013) is supported by the data reported either in the original study or replication attempt.
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It's Innate Ep. 3: An Innate Fear of the Term Innate? (with David Rakison)
5 August 2020 | 1 hr 32 mins
categorization, computational modeling, david rakison, mechanism, paired-preference
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It's Innate Ep. 2: When 1+1 equals more, not 2
17 July 2020 | 1 hr 27 mins
addition and subtraction, familiarization, habituation, infant math, open science, p-values, statistics
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It's Innate Ep. 1: Mechanisms all the way down
4 July 2020 | 1 hr 39 mins
mechanisms, social comparison