
Overcoming Negativity Bias
11/10/21 • 11 min
2 Listeners
Humans are hardwired to pay more attention to negative events than positive events. This proclivity is known as the negativity bias. Thankfully, a large number of good events can overcome the effects of a small number of bad events, which can work out well because most of us experience many more positive events than negative events. The problem is that we tend to pay more attention to the bad things that happen.
In this episode, Andrea and Craig discuss negativity bias and how to overcome its effects by attending more to positive events. As always, Craig makes a mention of pets and animals while Andrea figures out a way to mention Aristotle. Listen to this episode to learn how to keep the little negative things from bothering you so much and gain insight into how focusing on the positive will have a beneficial effect on your life and mental health.
Articles on Negativity Bias:
Not all emotions are created equal: The negativity bias in social-emotional development
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3652533/
Reappraisal—but not Suppression—Tendencies Determine Negativity Bias After Laboratory and Real-World Stress Exposure
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8531907/
Convergent behavioral and corticolimbic connectivity evidence of a negativity bias in children and adolescents
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5390736/
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Live Well and Flourish website: https://www.livewellandflourish.com/
The theme music for Live Well and Flourish was written by Hazel Crossler, [email protected].
Production assistant - Paul Robert
Humans are hardwired to pay more attention to negative events than positive events. This proclivity is known as the negativity bias. Thankfully, a large number of good events can overcome the effects of a small number of bad events, which can work out well because most of us experience many more positive events than negative events. The problem is that we tend to pay more attention to the bad things that happen.
In this episode, Andrea and Craig discuss negativity bias and how to overcome its effects by attending more to positive events. As always, Craig makes a mention of pets and animals while Andrea figures out a way to mention Aristotle. Listen to this episode to learn how to keep the little negative things from bothering you so much and gain insight into how focusing on the positive will have a beneficial effect on your life and mental health.
Articles on Negativity Bias:
Not all emotions are created equal: The negativity bias in social-emotional development
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3652533/
Reappraisal—but not Suppression—Tendencies Determine Negativity Bias After Laboratory and Real-World Stress Exposure
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8531907/
Convergent behavioral and corticolimbic connectivity evidence of a negativity bias in children and adolescents
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5390736/
------
Live Well and Flourish website: https://www.livewellandflourish.com/
The theme music for Live Well and Flourish was written by Hazel Crossler, [email protected].
Production assistant - Paul Robert
Previous Episode

How #Caturday helps us flourish
Craig’s favorite day of the week is Saturday, not just because it’s recording day, but also because it’s #Caturday! (It really is a thing.) Fun, seemingly silly activities like posting or viewing cat pictures (or dog pics, or whatever) give us some hints on an often overlooked aspect of flourishing. In this episode, we explore why frivolous activities such as #Caturday can help us flourish by giving us short breaks from the daily grind of life.
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Live Well and Flourish website: https://www.livewellandflourish.com/
The theme music for Live Well and Flourish was written by Hazel Crossler, [email protected].
Production assistant - Paul Robert
Next Episode

Pleasure and Utility
We often hear of utility, usually as it relates to economics or usefulness. But there is a different view of utility, one that focuses on pleasure. In this episode, Andrea and Craig discuss this view of utility as pleasure, which is the foundation of Jeremey Bentham and John Stuart Mills' view of utilitarianism. They also discuss the difference between transitory, shallow pleasures (like eating yummy french fries) and enduring deep pleasures (such as being a good person). At the end of the episode Andrea and Craig provide some suggestions for building more pleasure into your life.
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Live Well and Flourish website: https://www.livewellandflourish.com/
The theme music for Live Well and Flourish was written by Hazel Crossler, [email protected].
Production assistant - Paul Robert
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