Behavioral Scientist’s Summer Book List 2021
Summer isn’t the same without a good reading list. Here are our behavioral science picks for summer 2021.
Antonia Violante is the books editor at Behavioral Scientist. She is a UX strategist at Vanguard, where she focuses on conversational channels for personal investors. She previously worked at ideas42 and earned her master's degree in integrated product design at the University of Pennsylvania.
Summer isn’t the same without a good reading list. Here are our behavioral science picks for summer 2021.
Our list of noteworthy behavioral science books published in 2020 (with a peek at what’s coming in early 2021).
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What would summer be without a good reading list? A list of our favorite behavioral science reads from 2020 so far.
When NPR science reporter Lulu Miller heard about a taxonomist who sewed names directly onto his fish specimens after the 1906 earthquake ruined his collection, her ears perked up.
Economist Robert Frank used to believe that any individual action a person takes to reduce their carbon footprint would have a tiny, negligible impact on the planet. He’s changed his mind.
Buzzy headlines cloud our understanding of how advanced AI really is. We should stop focusing on apocalyptic scenarios, says cognitive scientist Gary Marcus, and start making AI more useful.
Two economists are walking down the street. One sees a $20 bill lying on the sidewalk and says, “Look at that $20 bill!” The second economist responds, “Nah, that’s not a $20 bill. If it was, someone would have picked it up already.”