World of Psychology

Top Ten Psychology Videos

By Sandra Kiume
July 14, 2008

Best of the Web

Cognitive to clinical to social, the many applications of psychology reveal profound thoughts, human frailties and strengths. These are some of the best results, framed in video players.

1. An Unquiet Mind: Personal Reflections on Manic-Depressive Illness. Kay Redfield Jamison doesn’t just suffer from bipolar disorder, she literally wrote the book. She co-authored the comprehensive textbook Manic-Depressive Illness: Bipolar Disorders and Recurrent Depression while doing research as a Professor of Psychiatry at Johns Hopkins. This talk was part of the tour for her awesome memoir An Unquiet Mind, and she is eloquently intimate about her own experiences. (00:30:29)

2. The Stanford Prison Experiment. Historic 1971 video (edited for an unknown vintage TV show) from the behavioral experiment by Philip Zimbardo, resulting in healthy people taking on unhealthy situational roles. Zimbardo recently discussed its relevance to contemporary war crimes in a speaking tour - watch The Lucifer Effect: How Good People Turn Evil. (00:05:24)

3. My Stroke of Insight: Jill Bolte Taylor at TED Talks. Rousing and inspiring lecture from a neuroanatomist about her internal observations and recovery from a stroke and the spiritual and psychological values she learned in the process. There’s also the Oprah webcast that followed her exposure from this sensational talk. Read her great memoir, offline. (00:18:44)

4. The Paradox of Choice features Barry Schwartz in a provocative TED Talk with a different view on social psychology - too much consumer choice makes us unhappy. Not just when you’re buying salad dressing; Schwartz looks at some wider sociological impacts of increased choice. (00:19:48)

5. Trapped: Mental Illness in America’s Prisons. Filmmaker Jenn Ackerman beautifully documents life on a psychiatric ward in a Kentucky prison. She interviews inmates, inmate helpers and staff about what it’s like to have a severe mental illness after most psych hospitals have closed and prisons take on a containment role. This film does reinforce some stereotypes, as wardens talk about being assaulted by patients and we hear tormented screams echoing through the cells. But we also hear that some of the men prefer to be locked in a prison cell 23-24 hours a day than free in a society that offers no help and “beats them down” until back in a cell. A short video but work continues as Ackerman plans to expand it into a feature film in 2009. (00:06:55)

6. Teen Brain. The brain continues developing until about age 25. The prefrontal cortex is involved in impulse control and judgement, and is among the last areas to develop. This award-winning episode of Catalyst is about neuroethics, questions of brain and behavior. It looks at moral and legal culpability between ages 18-25 and proposes new ideas. (00:12:23)

7. Depression: Out of the Shadows. Recommended by a Psych Central blog reader, this PBS documentary and roundtable discussion (hosted by Jane Pauley, herself bipolar) premiered in May 2008 but is available online in previews and “chapters” or by ordering a DVD. Experts include Andrew Solomon, author of The Noonday Demon: An Atlas of Depression, who tells a touching story of his own grief and depression. (approx. 00:60:00)

8. Thin, by Lauren Greenfield, is a reality-style look at eating disorders from the inside of a residential treatment facility. Women in treatment talk about why and how they got there. We witness struggles with staff, one another and within themselves. This HBO documentary is not officially available online, but there is a good interview with the director, a preview, and you can order a DVD. (approx. 00:60:00)

9. I Am Not Sick, I Don’t Need Help: Research on Poor Insight and How We Can Help. Clinical psychologist Xavier Amador in a sprawling but enlightening discussion of anosognosia, or lack of insight about one’s own delusions, psychosis and other symptoms. Examples cited include the woman who believed she was married to David Letterman, and Theodore John “Ted” Kaczynski (the Unabomber) who denied mental illness despite threat of conviction. More casual than clinical and geared to consumers and family, Amador gives a good perspective about what it’s like for a person to have delusions and psychosis. Includes motivational interviewing and other therapies. (01:51:06)

10. The Psychology of Global Warming. Stumbling on Happiness best-selling author and professor Dan Gilbert on our reaction to threats. A memorable quote: “The fact is that climate change, if it were caused by gay sex, or caused by the practice of eating puppies, millions of Americans would right now be massing on the street insisting that the administration do something about it.” Social and evolutionary psychology help explain why people don’t get as actively outraged over acid rain as other issues. (00:14:48)


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15 Comments to
“Top Ten Psychology Videos”

This list intrigued me. Is there an archive of these type movies online?

Hi Mel - there are many archives, but they’re usually for a specific event, disorder, school or television site so you have to weed through things. Many blogs also offer occasional videos but not always. But one site you might like (disclosure: it’s my own non-profit site) is Channel N. It curates videos and has an archive of links and embeds.

Are you looking for something specific? I might be able to direct you.

The titles of these videos are hysterical.

I don’t really understand the last one, but okay.

I would also highly recommend “The Eye of the Storm”, which documents an elementary school teacher’s experiments with racism/superiority as simulated via eye color.

Milgram??? what about his. i mean if u have Zimbado (stanford prison simulation) then y not his. also something on sperrys split brain study. both well worthy of this list

People actually buying this shit? (I mean psychology as a science, in general). “I Am Not Sick, I Don’t Need Help: Research on Poor Insight and How We Can Help.” -> Give us your money and we’ll spend some time convincing you that you have a problem, then we’ll “treat” ya :)

It’s narrow mindedness like that that stops mental health issues being recognised, just because you don’t see something, doesn’t mean it isn’t there, and the same goes for not knowing anyone who has ever suffered with one. When you have been there yourself, or watched someone you love going through it, then come back and make your nasty comments…nice article, by the way :)

Thanks for the comeback comment. I totally agree. :)

Sure, all the issues I have with trust, and opening up to people. That has nothing to do with being tormented all through school, I’m just making up that I have psychological problems.
People like that make me sick, probably a scientologist.
Sure it make smore since to believe a man, that is recorded as saying the best way he could think of to get rich was start a fake religion.

I totally agree with Ryan and @crapProcessor.

I have an uncle with skitzophrenia, and a cousin with bipolar disorder, and I think I might have some sort of disorder myself as I get irritated for no reason at all, I tear up my room and hurt myself if I feel extremely guilty.. oh, and that incident in the bathroom where my imagination felt more real than the bathroom… I’m just making that all up. Riiight. It just makes me sick when I hear the stories of things my uncle has done, and look up the books he’s written, and alternately get told mental illnesses don’t exist. It is not normal to run through the woods, totally shaven, and naked. Twice.

And Ryan, I still am in school and I’ve been tormented through all the school I’ve experienced as well. Same problems with the trust thing.

There’s a fascinating film on psychotherapy from the sixties that I recommend:
“Three Approaches to Psychotherapy: Gloria”
http://ftvdb.bfi.org.uk/sift/title/94118

The client “Gloria” has a session with 3 different psychotherapists, each using a very different type of therapy that they founded. The therapists are a who’s who of therapy: Carl Rogers (client-centered, humanist); Fritz Perls (Gestalt); and Albert Ellis (Rational Emotive Therapy).

The film also provides a kind of test of one’s own personality. I saw this film in a psychology class and afterwards the instructor asked the class which therapist they thought would be the most helpful to Gloria if she chose to do therapy with him. The instructor and class overwhelmingly thought Ellis would be best! I couldn’t stand Ellis and thought he would not be helpful to Gloria at all. (He would hardly even let her speak. I remember thinking, “this is therapy? let her speak, a**hole!) LOL.

Anyway, if you’re interested in psychology and psychotherapy, this classic film is not to be missed.

Excellent videos! Amazing! Thank you!
Congratulations!

Century of the self.

I agree with @Tangi. 3-Approaches is not to be missed if ones interests in psychology touch on the therapeutic side. It is pretty much standard viewing fare in all licensed therapeutic programs. Should easily be in this top 10

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    Last reviewed: By John M. Grohol, Psy.D. on 9 Aug 2008

 


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