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Allison Woodbrookes

2episodes
1podcast

We have 2 summarized appearances for Allison Woodbrookes so far. Browse all podcasts to discover more episodes.

Featured On 1 Podcast

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2 episodes
Hidden Brain

The Conversations that Bring Us Closer

Hidden Brain
49 minBehavioral Scientist at Harvard Business School

AI Summary

→ WHAT IT COVERS Harvard behavioral scientist Alison Wood Brooks explains research-backed techniques for navigating difficult conversations, from demanding raises to confronting insensitive behavior, by shifting from persuasion mindset to learning orientation and using conversational receptiveness strategies. → KEY INSIGHTS - **Learning vs. Persuading:** When facing difficult conversations, ask questions to understand the other person's perspective rather than defending your position. This learning orientation keeps conversations productive, while attempts to persuade trigger defensiveness and shut down dialogue completely. - **Conversational Receptiveness Framework:** Use acknowledgment (repeat what you heard), affirmation (attach positive validation like "that makes sense"), and hedging language ("I think" or "I wonder") to make your points more receivable. These techniques are independent of agreement but enable continued engagement. - **Reframing Negative Emotions:** Convert anxiety into excitement by reappraising high-arousal negative feelings as positive ones. This single-step shift (changing valence while maintaining arousal) proves more effective than attempting to calm down, which requires controlling physiological responses and moving two dimensions simultaneously. - **Perspective-Taking Error:** Avoid imagining how you would feel in someone's situation, as humans use their own egocentric viewpoint as proxy. Instead, directly ask questions to learn their actual thoughts and feelings, which differ more than we estimate from our own experiences and reactions. → NOTABLE MOMENT A student privately told Professor Brooks her classroom comment felt heteronormative and exclusionary. Rather than becoming defensive, she asked questions to understand his experience, discovering most professors made him feel this way but she was the only one he felt safe approaching. 💼 SPONSORS None detected 🏷️ Difficult Conversations, Conversational Receptiveness, Conflict Resolution, Communication Skills

Hidden Brain

We Need to Talk

Hidden Brain
51 minBehavioral Scientist at Harvard Business School

AI Summary

→ WHAT IT COVERS Harvard behavioral scientist Alison Wood Brooks explains research-backed techniques to improve conversation skills, including question-asking strategies, topic preparation, avoiding common conversational traps, and moving beyond small talk to create meaningful connections with others. → KEY INSIGHTS - **Question-asking frequency:** Asking just one additional question per conversation significantly increases likability and connection. Speed daters who asked one more question per four-minute date converted one additional date into a yes, demonstrating measurable impact of curiosity on relationship outcomes. - **Follow-up questions:** Follow-up questions prove more powerful than initial questions because they demonstrate undeniable listening and responsiveness. In studies of 1,100 speed dates, the effect of questions on getting second dates was driven almost entirely by follow-ups rather than standalone questions. - **Topic switching strategy:** Effective conversationalists switch topics frequently while immediately going deep on each new subject through rapid question-asking. This approach combines both breadth and depth rather than treating them as trade-offs, keeping conversations engaging without stagnation. - **Mind wandering prevalence:** People's minds wander 24% of the time during conversations based on self-reports collected every five minutes. Researchers suspect this percentage underestimates actual inattention since people feel embarrassed admitting they weren't listening to their conversation partner. → NOTABLE MOMENT A woman gave her boyfriend-skeptical friend feedback about the relationship at dinner, only to receive an engagement announcement photo two days later. The friend had already helped pick the ring, revealing how completely the well-intentioned advice had missed the actual situation. 💼 SPONSORS None detected 🏷️ Conversation Skills, Question-Asking Techniques, Active Listening, Interpersonal Communication

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