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The Slot Machine in Your Pocket: How Apps Hijack Your Brain (ND2E20)

22 min · 14 mei 2026
aflevering The Slot Machine in Your Pocket: How Apps Hijack Your Brain (ND2E20) artwork

Beschrijving

Every time you pull to refresh, swipe on a dating app, or scroll a feed that never ends, your brain is running the same circuit B.F. Skinner discovered in pigeons in the 1950s. The variable ratio reinforcement schedule is the most powerful behavioral conditioning mechanism psychology has ever identified, and it has been quietly engineered into the technology you carry in your pocket. In this conversation, you'll learn exactly how the mechanism works, why willpower is the wrong tool to fight it, and how the same neurological principle shows up in the people closest to you. Topics covered: * B.F. Skinner's schedules of reinforcement and the variable ratio discovery * Wolfram Schultz's dopamine research at Cambridge and why uncertain rewards trigger a larger response than certain ones * The neuroscience of the near miss in slot machine design * Aza Raskin on infinite scroll and the 200,000 hours of daily attention it costs * Former Facebook VP Chamath Palihapitiya's admission about dopamine-driven feedback loops * Why dating app swipe mechanics optimize for engagement, not connection * Teasing as the oldest variable ratio schedule, and the line between play and manipulation * The dopamine deficit state, prefrontal cortex bypass, and the case for pre-commitment over willpower * 2025 research on social media addiction patterns in Generation Z Rate and review the show with five stars wherever you listen, and follow @mybrainwisecoach on every platform for more. 00:00 The Pigeon and the Lever 00:01 Welcome to Neuroscience Digest 00:02 Skinner's Schedules of Reinforcement 00:03 The Dopamine Anticipation Circuit 00:05 Why Uncertainty Amplifies Wanting 00:06 Inside the Slot Machine 00:07 The Near Miss as Accelerant 00:08 Your Phone Is the Lever 00:09 Infinite Scroll and Pull to Refresh 00:10 The Swipe and Dating App Design 00:11 Teasing as Variable Ratio Schedule 00:12 Playful Teasing Versus Manipulation 00:14 When Resolution Never Comes 00:15 The Positive Side of Anticipation 00:16 The Dopamine Deficit Problem 00:17 The Prefrontal Cortex Bypass 00:18 Exploitation of the Vulnerable 00:19 Field Guide: Recognize the Mechanism 00:20 Field Guide: Pre-Commit, Don't Willpower 00:21 Field Guide: Audit Your Own Behavior 00:21 Skinner's Pigeons in Our Pockets 00:22 Close and Call to Action

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aflevering Why Zebras Don't Get Ulcers: The Neuroscience of Worry (ND2E23) artwork

Why Zebras Don't Get Ulcers: The Neuroscience of Worry (ND2E23)

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aflevering You Are Not One Self: The Science of Inner Multiplicity (S2E23) artwork

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aflevering The Encoding-Retrieval Gap: Why Learning Doesn't Transfer (ND2S22) artwork

The Encoding-Retrieval Gap: Why Learning Doesn't Transfer (ND2S22)

You finish a great training, take careful notes, feel like you've learned something real, and three months later the details are gone. That isn't a memory problem. It's a structural mismatch between how learning is usually designed and how memory actually works, and once you see it, you can fix it. In this conversation, Cole and Phil unpack the encoding-retrieval gap and the research that explains why so much professional development quietly fails to change behavior: * Endel Tulving and Donald Thompson's encoding specificity principle (1973) and why memory is stored as a web of contextual associations, not free-floating facts * Godden and Baddeley's 1975 underwater scuba diver study, where cross-context recall dropped by 40% * Hermann Ebbinghaus and the forgetting curve, first mapped in the 1880s * Robert Bjork's distinction between storage strength and retrieval strength, and why fluency is a poor signal of durable learning * Roediger and Karpicke's 2006 testing effect study in Psychological Science, and why retrieval practice beats restudying * Bjork's desirable difficulties, including spacing, interleaving, and retrieval practice * The explain-to-encode principle and why teaching what you just learned closes the gap faster than almost anything else * A practical field guide for self-directed learners: shift from rereading to retrieval, replace massed study with spaced review, and practice in the context where you'll actually use the knowledge If this episode helps you think differently about how your brain works, leave a five-star rating and review wherever you listen, and follow @mybrainwisecoach on every platform for more. 00:00 The Training You Already Forgot 01:00 A Gap We Keep Ignoring 01:30 Welcome to Neuroscience Digest 02:30 Encoding Specificity and Context 03:30 The Underwater Scuba Diver Study 05:00 Storage Strength Versus Retrieval Strength 06:30 The Testing Effect Explained 07:30 Desirable Difficulties and Spaced Practice 09:30 Varied Context and Teaching to Encode 10:00 Field Guide for Self-Directed Learners 13:30 What Stays With Us 14:30 Stay Curious, Stay BrainWise

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aflevering The Otrovert: A New Personality Type Beyond Introversion (S2E22) artwork

The Otrovert: A New Personality Type Beyond Introversion (S2E22)

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aflevering The Hidden Senses: How Your Body Reads the World Beyond Sight (ND2E21) artwork

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