These are books I've read that align with my interests. I find those books fascinating, well-written for a general audience, yet maintain a scientific approach and a formal tone throughout.
These are Podcasts episodes I've listened to that align with my interests. I find them fascinating for a general audience, yet maintain a scientific approach.
Paul Bloom on Empathy (link)
Ian Leslie on Curiosity (link)
Patrick House on Consciousness (link)
Adam Mastroianni on Peer review (link)
Adam Matroianni on the Brain, the Ears and how we learn (link)
Robert Sapolsky on Determinism, Free Will and Responsibility (link)
J. Doyne Farme on Chaos and Complexity (link)
Michael Blastland on the Hidden Half (link)
Annie Duke on the Power of Quitting (link)
Ben Gollub on Social Learning (link)
Aurélien Baillon on Incentivised Elicitation of Private Information (link)
Ran Spiegler on the Curious Culture of Economic Theory (link)
Chris Roth on Designing Information Provision Experiments (link)
Katy Milkman on How to Change (link)
Itzhak Gilboa on Case-Based Decision Theory (link)
Florian Zimmermann on Associative Memory and Belief Formation (link)
Ariel Rubinstein on Equilibrium in the Jungle (link)
Anna Dreber on Replication Markets (link)
Roberto Weber on Identifying Social Norms (link)
Leonardo Bursztyn on Missperceived Social Norms (link)
J. Abeler and D. Nosenzo on Preferences for Truth-Telling (link)
Bertil Tungodden on Fariness Across the World (link)