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Why Do We Like Being Scared? - With Brendan Walker

Offered By: The Royal Institution via YouTube

Tags

Psychology Courses Virtual Reality Courses Human Behavior Courses

Course Description

Overview

Explore the fascinating intersection of fear and pleasure in this Royal Institution lecture. Delve into the psychology behind thrill-seeking behavior, examining why humans actively seek out frightening experiences like horror movies and rollercoasters. Learn about the 'thrill-seeking gene', techniques for optimizing rides to engineer fear, and the underlying reasons we find being scared enjoyable. Discover how researchers measure and analyze emotional responses to thrilling experiences, including facial coding and physiological indicators. Gain insights into the science of roller coaster design, the role of the vestibular system in experiencing thrills, and cutting-edge experiments involving adaptive rides and virtual reality. Uncover the complex relationship between fear, pleasure, and human psychology in this comprehensive exploration of why we like being scared.

Syllabus

Introduction
Joe Walker
What is Thrill
Tower of Terror
Alton Towers
Reverse Engineering Thrill
Take Control
Graph of Emotions
Measuring Emotions
Duchenne
Facial Action Coding
The Skin
The Sweet Spot
Sweaty Feet
Adaptive Ride Experiment 1
Live Music Experiment
Built To Thrill Campaign
Science of Roller Coasters
Thrill Factor Rating
Inverted Loop
Inverted Slide
Loop The Loop
Vestibular System
Motion Simulator
EEG
Neurosis
Virtual Reality
The vestibular system
What inspired you


Taught by

The Royal Institution

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