PodcastsDocumentaryThe Human Behavior Podcast

The Human Behavior Podcast

The Human Behavior Podcast
The Human Behavior Podcast
Latest episode

290 episodes

  • The Human Behavior Podcast

    When Technology Outpaces Human Performance with Alan Kearney

    21/04/2026 | 1h 33 mins.
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    Night vision keeps getting smarter, but our brains do not update on the same schedule. We’re joined by defense expert Alan Kearney, a former Irish Defence Forces officer who now works in European defense industry, to explore a problem that reaches far beyond goggles and helmets: what happens when advanced soldier systems outpace human cognition in the exact moments stress is highest?

    We start with the fundamentals of modern night vision and thermal fusion, then move into the messy reality of human performance. Under lethal threat, the sympathetic response and HPA axis change attention, memory, and perception. That’s where latency, digital overlays, AI cueing, and networked data can become more than “extra information” they can become friction. We talk human factors engineering, cognitive load, pattern recognition, and why an information feed is not the same thing as situational awareness.

    From aviation lessons to procurement-room demo traps, we pressure-test the assumptions behind modernization. We also dig into mission command and the risks that come with total visibility, plus the long-term cost of over-reliance on tools that quietly erode core skills. The takeaway is not anti-tech. It’s a human-first approach: design systems that match neurobiology, and raise the baseline with realistic training and training to failure so warfighters are never learning the hard way.

    If you care about military readiness, law enforcement performance, or how people make decisions under pressure, subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review with the biggest tradeoff you’ve seen between “more tech” and “better performance.”
    Alans Article: https://mwi.westpoint.edu/night-vision-at-a-crossroads-when-technology-outpaces-the-neurobiology-of-close-combat/
    Support the show
    Website: https://thehumanbehaviorpodcast.buzzsprout.com/share

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheHumanBehaviorPodcast

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thehumanbehaviorpodcast/
    Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/ArcadiaCognerati
    More about Greg and Brian: https://arcadiacognerati.com/arcadia-cognerati-leadership-team/
  • The Human Behavior Podcast

    Probability & Language; The Cost of Being Certain

    04/03/2026 | 1h 3 mins.
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    In this episode, we’re talking about probabilistic thinking and why language matters more than most people realize. The central idea is simple: most bad decisions don’t come from a lack of information, they come from mislabeling information. 
    When we apply labels too early, we collapse probability, reduce our options, and lock ourselves into conclusions that may not be accurate. We’ll break down how this happens, why your baseline matters, and how small changes in language can dramatically improve your decision-making under pressure.
    Support the show
    Website: https://thehumanbehaviorpodcast.buzzsprout.com/share

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheHumanBehaviorPodcast

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thehumanbehaviorpodcast/
    Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/ArcadiaCognerati
    More about Greg and Brian: https://arcadiacognerati.com/arcadia-cognerati-leadership-team/
  • The Human Behavior Podcast

    Detecting A Cunning Opponent

    04/01/2026 | 1h 7 mins.
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    Your gut has tried to warn you before. That flicker when someone lingers by a bathroom door, shadows you to the elevator, or blocks your path with a smile and a prop—it’s not paranoia, it’s a baseline breaking. We dig into a practical method for spotting a cunning opponent early, whether it’s a low-level hustler at the pump or a higher-stakes actor at a major event. The mechanics of deception don’t change; only the stakes do.

    We start by stripping away the jargon and defining terms that keep you clear-headed. Opponent isn’t “enemy”; it’s anyone competing for advantage in a shared environment. From there, we map the four recurring tools that reveal intent: access, blending, manipulation, and timing. You’ll learn how bad actors create closeness, hide in plain sight with props and roles, steer your attention, and pick their moment. Then we teach BASE—Baseline, Anomaly, Simplest explanation, Experiment—a concise loop you can run in real time to test what you think you’re seeing without overreacting.

    You’ll hear concrete examples from gas stations, hotels, tourist piers, and event lines, plus how to communicate what matters with short, useful language that prompts action. We walk through MLCOA versus MDCOA to balance likely and dangerous interpretations, then show low-calorie experiments—changing angle, reversing course, quick contact, second set of eyes—that force a reaction and buy time and distance. If you can catch a shoplifter’s access play, you can disrupt a more serious plan using the same cues. This is situational awareness you can practice today: clean, repeatable, and calm under pressure.

    If this helped sharpen your instincts, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a quick review. For deeper dives and drills, check out our Patreon and keep the reps going—training changes behavior.
    Support the show
    Website: https://thehumanbehaviorpodcast.buzzsprout.com/share

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheHumanBehaviorPodcast

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thehumanbehaviorpodcast/
    Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/ArcadiaCognerati
    More about Greg and Brian: https://arcadiacognerati.com/arcadia-cognerati-leadership-team/
  • The Human Behavior Podcast

    "Darwin's People" by Brian Moon

    18/11/2025 | 1h 12 mins.
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    When decisions can’t wait for perfect data, you need methods that actually work in the real world. We sit down with Brian Moon to pull naturalistic decision making out of journals and into the field where cops, medics, operators, and executives make consequential calls under stress, time pressure, and uncertainty. The conversation opens with a clear critique: elegant lab studies often miss the work. From there, we rebuild on stronger ground; agency, process, and the lived patterns of true expertise. 
    Brian traces why experience isn’t just hours served but exposure to hard problems, responsibility for outcomes, and honest feedback that reshapes judgment. We unpack how experts blend rapid recognition with deliberate checks, using counterfactuals to keep first interpretations from hardening too soon. If you lead training, you’ll get specific moves: design scenarios that force ownership of the whole problem; capture tacit cues through structured debriefs; and teach a shared language for uncertainty so teams can flexecute as conditions change. We also push into high-friction topics like use-of-force errors and pathways to violence, showing how process signals, not labels or post-hoc narratives, offer the best chance to prevent bad outcomes.
    Across the hour, you’ll hear how to spot and grow real SMEs, why credentials alone fall short, and how to engineer environments where sensemaking becomes a habit instead of a hope. Whether you work a midnight shift or a corner office, you’ll leave with practical tools to clean up your decisions this week and a sharper lens for understanding human behavior where it actually happens: on the street, on the line, and in the moment. If this conversation helps, share it with a teammate, subscribe for more, and drop a review so others can find it. 
    Darwin's People: AMAZON
    Support the show
    Website: https://thehumanbehaviorpodcast.buzzsprout.com/share

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheHumanBehaviorPodcast

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thehumanbehaviorpodcast/
    Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/ArcadiaCognerati
    More about Greg and Brian: https://arcadiacognerati.com/arcadia-cognerati-leadership-team/
  • The Human Behavior Podcast

    Your Internal Baseline

    10/11/2025 | 1h 9 mins.
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    In today’s episode, we’re flipping the lens inward. You’ve heard us talk about reading the world around you — the external baseline — but what about reading yourself? 
    What It Is (Street Definition)
    Your internal baseline is your mental operating system. It’s the framework that shapes how you see, think, and react under stress. It’s built from everything you’ve lived, learned, and believed:
    Past Experiences: The lessons, scars, and memories that form your personal rulebook.
    Training & Conditioning: The shortcuts and instincts your brain relies on when there’s no time to think.
    Values & Beliefs: The unseen filters that shape what you think is right, wrong, or risky.
    Policies & Procedures: The internal and external rules you follow (often unconsciously).
    Cognitive Limits: The hard caps of being human: fatigue, stress, emotion, and biology. 
    The core question: “Where do I think I am — and where am I actually?”
    The gap between what you believe and what’s real determines how well you can sense, decide, and act.
    Support the show
    Website: https://thehumanbehaviorpodcast.buzzsprout.com/share

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheHumanBehaviorPodcast

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thehumanbehaviorpodcast/
    Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/ArcadiaCognerati
    More about Greg and Brian: https://arcadiacognerati.com/arcadia-cognerati-leadership-team/
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About The Human Behavior Podcast
Do you ever wonder why people act the way that they do? Join human behavior experts Brian Marren and Greg Williams as they discuss all things human behavior related. Their goal is to increase your Advanced Critical Thinking ability through a better understanding of HBPR&A (Human Behavior Pattern Recognition & Analysis.) What is HBPR&A? It's a scientific (and fun) way to understand and articulate human behavior cues so that you can predict likely outcomes and it works regardless of your race, religion, political ideology or culture!
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