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Dacher Keltner

2episodes
2podcasts

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

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2 episodes
Huberman Lab

Cultivating Awe & Emotional Connection in Daily Life | Dr. Dacher Keltner

Huberman Lab
141 minProfessor of Psychology, Co-Director of the Greater Good Science Center at UC Berkeley

AI Summary

→ WHAT IT COVERS Andrew Huberman speaks with UC Berkeley psychologist Dacher Keltner about the science of awe — what triggers it, how to cultivate it daily, and its measurable health benefits. They cover the neuroscience of emotion, collective bonding, embarrassment's social function, how visual aperture affects time perception, and why self-focus is the primary barrier to experiencing awe. → KEY INSIGHTS - **Awe Walk Protocol:** Once weekly, take a 30-minute walk somewhere unfamiliar and deliberately shift attention from small to vast — examine a single leaf, then the full tree canopy, then cloud patterns. UC Berkeley research with adults aged 75+ showed this practice reduced physical pain over 8 weeks and, in 6-year follow-up data, correlated with measurably better brain health outcomes. Slow breathing synchronized with walking pace amplifies the effect. - **Awe as Anti-Inflammatory Medicine:** One minute of awe daily reduced long COVID symptoms in clinical observation, and awe experiences consistently correlate with reduced inflammatory markers and elevated vagal tone. The mechanism appears to involve parasympathetic nervous system activation. Physicians are beginning to formally prescribe nature exposure and music as awe-delivery mechanisms, positioning it as a low-cost, zero-side-effect therapeutic intervention. - **Visual Aperture and Time Perception:** Narrowing visual focus — like reading a phone screen — activates the sympathetic nervous system and increases the rate of time-sampling, making moments feel longer and more stressful. Widening to a horizon view triggers parasympathetic relaxation and reduces time-sampling frequency. Deliberately cycling between narrow and wide visual aperture, rather than staying fixed at either extreme, produces the most beneficial psychological state. - **The 20-Emotion Taxonomy:** The canonical six-emotion model from Paul Ekman has been expanded through computational analysis of 2 billion videos across 144 cultures. Researcher Alan Cowen's AI-coded study found 16 distinct facial expressions with 75% cross-cultural overlap, supporting a taxonomy of approximately 20 discrete emotional states including awe, compassion, love, and embarrassment. Roughly 50–60% of emotional expression is hardwired; the remainder varies culturally. - **Embarrassment as Social Trust Signal:** Displaying embarrassment after a social misstep increases how much others like and trust the person. Research with fraternity groups at the University of Wisconsin showed that members who showed more embarrassment during teasing were rated as better group members. Playful teasing that signals group norms without humiliating individuals predicts higher social popularity, while teasing that excludes or demeans constitutes bullying with measurable negative group outcomes. - **Community as the Strongest Longevity Variable:** Meta-analysis of 350,000 participants shows that strong social community adds approximately 10 years of life expectancy — surpassing the 5–8 year benefit associated with the highest-performing exercise modalities like sprinting and gymnastics. Shared physical practices such as group sauna, breathwork, and farmers markets function as modern collective effervescence rituals, producing the same neurological bonding effects as concerts and sporting events. - **Narcissism and Self-Focus Block Awe:** Self-directed attention is the primary neurological antagonist to awe. When attention is fixed on personal status, finances, or self-image, the brain cannot shift into the small-to-vast perceptual mode that generates awe. Longitudinal data from Jean Twenge shows rising narcissism rates correlate with declining awe experiences. Cocaine specifically was identified as a chemical model of this dynamic — elevating dopamine and adrenaline in ways that collapse perception into a self-referential loop. → NOTABLE MOMENT Keltner describes how a study tracking elderly participants through an 8-week awe walk program found that six years later, those participants showed measurably better brain health outcomes. The finding reframes awe not as a luxury emotional experience but as a neurological maintenance practice with compounding long-term returns, comparable in significance to physical exercise protocols. 💼 SPONSORS [{"name": "Joovv", "url": "https://joovv.com/huberman"}, {"name": "Helix Sleep", "url": "https://helixsleep.com/huberman"}, {"name": "AG1", "url": "https://drinkag1.com/huberman"}, {"name": "Function", "url": "https://functionhealth.com/huberman"}, {"name": "Our Place", "url": "https://fromourplace.com/huberman"}] 🏷️ Awe Science, Vagal Tone, Emotion Neuroscience, Collective Effervescence, Longevity, Social Bonding, Visual Perception

Hidden Brain

The Reset Button

Hidden Brain
97 minPsychologist/Professor

AI Summary

→ WHAT IT COVERS Psychologist Dacher Keltner explores the science of awe, examining how experiences of vastness and wonder reduce anxiety, expand perspective, quiet self-focus, and activate prosocial behavior, while Mary Helen Imordino-Yang discusses transcendent thinking in education and student development. → KEY INSIGHTS - **Awe's Physical Effects:** Experiencing awe activates the vagus nerve, slowing heart rate and deepening breathing, while reducing inflammatory cytokines by significant margins. Regular awe experiences correlate with lower cortisol levels and decreased chronic inflammation, addressing major health threats in modern society through simple exposure to vast natural phenomena. - **The Small Self Phenomenon:** When people view awe-inspiring sights like Yosemite Valley or stand beside a T-rex skeleton, they draw themselves smaller and shift self-descriptions from individual traits to collective identities. This reduction in ego-focused thinking increases prosocial behaviors like helping strangers pick up dropped items within minutes of exposure. - **Awe Walks for Mental Health:** Adults over seventy-five who took weekly awe walks for eight weeks, focusing on wonder and looking beyond the horizon, reported measurably less daily anxiety and distress. Their self-portraits progressively shrank while including more environmental elements, demonstrating sustained perspective shifts from brief regular practice. - **Learning Through Montessori Methods:** Students from Montessori schools solving math problems show different brain patterns than traditionally-schooled peers. When encountering wrong answers, Montessori students engage problem-solving networks and improve on subsequent attempts, while traditional students show memory-storage patterns and repeat mistakes, despite equal overall accuracy rates. - **Transcendent Thinking in Education:** Teaching algebra through real community applications, like helping families calculate mortgage payments and college savings using exponential growth equations, creates deeper engagement than abstract instruction. Students develop serious focus and integrate mathematical thinking into their identity when content connects to meaningful civic contribution. → NOTABLE MOMENT A veteran experiencing severe PTSD symptoms participated in a river rafting study and reported thirty percent reduction in post-traumatic stress after one week. Looking at a star-filled sky, the veteran realized personal worries held less importance than previously believed, while recognizing greater potential for meaningful contribution. 💼 SPONSORS None detected 🏷️ Awe Psychology, Transcendent Thinking, Educational Neuroscience, Montessori Method, Vagus Nerve Activation, PTSD Treatment

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