I’d really like to see a K&T-style study that wasn’t about death. We already know mortality salience has a priming effect. But is it correct to generalize it to other kinds of framing?
I can’t give another suggestion unless you tell me what’s undesirable about watching TED. There’s a transcript on the site, but he uses graphics copiously, so I’m curious how useful it is. Less Wrong says it is too long to post as a comment.
I’d really like to see a K&T-style study that wasn’t about death. We already know mortality salience has a priming effect. But is it correct to generalize it to other kinds of framing?
Check out most of behavioral economics. (I recommend Dan Gilbert on Ted, not linked to avoid trivial chances to waste time)
Yeah, I don’t watch TED anymore. Any other specific suggestions?
I can’t give another suggestion unless you tell me what’s undesirable about watching TED. There’s a transcript on the site, but he uses graphics copiously, so I’m curious how useful it is. Less Wrong says it is too long to post as a comment.
I don’t like watching videos of lectures. I thought perhaps you had more references on behavioral economics; if you don’t, no big deal.