57 episódios

Research. Infodemics. Conflict Resolution. Those three pillars form the foundation of Data Doyenne. Add Science and Health, Social Justice, and Leadership and you have truth telling through research and education. Curiosity required.

Welcome to Data Doyenne. I am Dr. Pauline Hoffmann and I am your podcast hostess. This podcast is for the data nerd and the data nervous. I take a look at what’s real and what is not. What is true and what is false. Come along on this journey with me.


Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/data-doyenne/support

Data Doyenne Dr. Pauline W. Hoffmann

    • Educação

Research. Infodemics. Conflict Resolution. Those three pillars form the foundation of Data Doyenne. Add Science and Health, Social Justice, and Leadership and you have truth telling through research and education. Curiosity required.

Welcome to Data Doyenne. I am Dr. Pauline Hoffmann and I am your podcast hostess. This podcast is for the data nerd and the data nervous. I take a look at what’s real and what is not. What is true and what is false. Come along on this journey with me.


Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/data-doyenne/support

    PB&J: Ghosts of Conspiracies Past, Present and Future. Bah, humbug!

    PB&J: Ghosts of Conspiracies Past, Present and Future. Bah, humbug!

    In the spirit of the season, Dr. Ben Gross and I channel Ebenezer Scrooge and detail our favorite conspiracies past and present. We also predict future conspiracies. How far into dystopia did we go? Listen to find out.

    Also, Ben and I embraced the season and shared some favorite holiday movies as well as the best gifts we've ever gotten and what we resolve for the new year.

    Fun was had by all. Why would you miss this?


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    Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/data-doyenne/support

    • 49 min
    PB&J - Pauline, Ben and Just the Facts: Voting, Elections, Politics

    PB&J - Pauline, Ben and Just the Facts: Voting, Elections, Politics

    Welcome back to Dr. Ben Gross in our ongoing series of talks about conspiracy theories. This week we talk about voting, election and political conspiracy theories. Why do people believe these conspiracies? What are some of the common conspiracies? How do we handle them? What do we think?

    We reference the following in our discussion:

    Pew Research Survey

    Conspiracy mentality and political orientation across 26 countries

    Making an impression: the effects of sharing conspiracy theories

    The Big Lie: Expressive responding and conspiratorial beliefs in the U.S.


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    • 48 min
    PB&J - Pauline, Ben and Just the Facts - Aliens

    PB&J - Pauline, Ben and Just the Facts - Aliens

    Welcome back to Dr. Ben Gross in our ongoing series of talks about conspiracy theories. This week we talk about alien conspiracy theories. How and where did they originate? How long have people believed in aliens? Is it a problem that what was once a conspiracy now has some truth to it - or may have some truth to it? We discuss why people may believe in aliens from distrust of government to narcissism, to a need to belong, to a need for answers and certainty. We also have a message for aliens....if they are listening.

    Shout out to @BillMaher @DavidDuchovny for a theory we are calling Duchovian.

    We reference the following in our discussion:

    UFO Sightings in the U.S. GIS Map

    Mental Floss: https://www.mentalfloss.com/posts/ufo-facts-history-sightings

    NPR Article: https://www.npr.org/2021/06/04/1003262749/how-ufo-sightings-went-from-conspiracy-theory-to-a-serious-government-inquiry

    The Hill Article: https://thehill.com/opinion/3610916-congress-implies-ufos-have-non-human-origins/

    Vice Article: https://www.vice.com/en/article/3adadb/congress-admits-ufos-not-man-made-says-threats-increasing-exponentially

    NBC News Story: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA-h3dIeD_A&ab_channel=NBCNews

    60 Minutes Story: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZBtMbBPzqHY&ab_channel=60Minutes

    Media Logic & Social Interaction (David Altheide): https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1525/si.1987.10.1.129

    Self-Perception Theory (Wiki): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-perception_theory

    Echo Chamber Media Effect (Wiki): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Echo_chamber_(media)#:~:text=The%20echo%20chamber%20effect%20occurs,declining%20exposure%20to%20other's%20opinions.

    Boomerang Effect (Wiki): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boomerang_effect_(psychology)

    Spiral of Silence (Wiki): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spiral_of_silence

    Confirmation Bias (Wiki): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Confirmation_bias


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    • 1h 31 min
    Disinformation Clinic

    Disinformation Clinic

    This podcast episode is an introduction to my upcoming disinformation clinic. Find out what disinformation and misinformation are. Learn what strategies are used by disinformers to draw you in and to encourage you to share. Find out how to combat disinformation.

    My ARS - arbitrary random stat - takes us on a tour of odd museums of the world.

    Sources for this episode:

    News Literacy Project

    Skeptical Science

    The Brookings Institute 

    CNN


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    • 33 min
    Western medical history with witty commentary by Data Doyenne

    Western medical history with witty commentary by Data Doyenne

    What doesn’t kill us makes us stronger. Or does it? Medical practices have certainly changed over the years – and one hopes for the better. Where did we come from medically speaking? That’s this week on the podcast.

    I've been reading some books about pandemics and epidemics. It is damn fascinating.

    One of things I am finding most fascinating is the evolution of science, health and medicine. Things didn’t just happen – much research goes into scientific discovery. Certainly there is some luck or just being in the right place at the right time, but much of it is laborious, painstaking, tedious work.

    This week I take a look at the history of "modern" medicine from a western point of view. Witty commentary included.



    References this week: 

    Common causes of death worldwide: https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/the-top-10-causes-of-death

    Western medical history timeline: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4379645/

    Medical oddities: https://www.history.com/tag/medicine


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    • 35 min
    PB&J (Pauline, Ben and Just the Facts)

    PB&J (Pauline, Ben and Just the Facts)

    This week is the first in an ongoing series of talks about conspiracy theories. The idea came to me as I was chatting with a friend and colleague, Dr. Ben Gross, an associate professor of sociology at St. Bonaventure University. The two of us have similar interests in that we want to teach media literacy – among other literacies. 

    Somehow in one of our conversations we started talking about conspiracy theories. We see them all over the news in any number of areas – particularly in politics and science and health. We then started talking about some of our favorites – those that are fun to think about but basically harmless. And those that are not fun and are harmful.

    This works very well with what I am trying to do here at the Data Doyenne podcast and in my own online classes. How do we take information that’s out there and determine what is real or not? What’s accurate? What’s false? Ben and I plan to take two conspiracies each month – one current and one historic and unpack it. Where is the kernel of truth – if there is one? How did it spread? Who believes it? How can you prevent falling into a conspiracy theory trap? All of this and more is the fun we plan to have on PB&J.

    This week we discuss what a conspiracy theory is, who believes them, why, how they spread, and are they harmful. 

    We reference two articles and a website:


    Interactive conspiracy chart
    Belief in Conspiracy Theories: Basic principles of an emerging research domain: https://doi.org/10.1002/ejsp.2530
    Understanding Conspiracy Theories: doi: 10.1111/pops.12568


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    • 52 min

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