We´re doomed we´re saved - Die Biorevolution   /     We're doomed we're saved #28

Description

Science can be complex and difficult to grasp, yet public understanding is crucial for navigating issues like disease risk, climate change, and pandemics. Clear, engaging science communication can help prevent misinformation and conspiracy theories, offering facts in place of myths. But how can we make science more digestible and appealing? Counterintuitively, it might be less facts and more emotions that can help to make science more appealing, more impactful – both when communicating to the public and to fellow scientists. In episode 28 of We’re doomed, We’re saved, Andreas Horchler and Louise von Stechow discuss strategies for scientific storytelling, drawing on principles that go back to ancient Greece and draw from modern brain science. Spoiler: It´s not as hard as it may look. Content and Editing: Louise von Stechow and Andreas Horchler Disclaimer: Louise von Stechow & Andreas Horchler and their guests express their personal opinions, which are founded on research on the respective topics, but do not claim to give medical, investment or even life advice in the podcast. Learn more about the future of biotech in our podcasts and keynotes. Contact us here: scientific communication: https://science-tales.com/ Podcasts: https://www.podcon.de/ Keynotes: https://www.zukunftsinstitut.de/louise-von-stechow Image: FUJIFILM, X100F via Unsplash Further reading: Cron, Lisa: "Wired for story, The Writer's Guide to Using Brain Science to Hook Readers from the Very First Sentence" Clarkson Potter/Ten Speed, 2012 Gallo, Carmine: "Talk like Ted" Main Market Edition, 2022

Subtitle
Scientific Communication - Telling Stories that Matter
Duration
2380
Publishing date
2024-11-01 06:00
Link
https://doomedsaved.podigee.io/29-scientific-storytelling
Contributors
  Louise von Stechow
author  
Enclosures
https://audio.podigee-cdn.net/1650658-m-8ec9834185970ac3628c039899cdebb0.mp3?source=feed
audio/mpeg

Shownotes

Scientific Communication - Telling Stories that Matter

Science can be complex and difficult to grasp, yet public understanding is crucial for navigating issues like disease risk, climate change, and pandemics. Clear, engaging science communication can help prevent misinformation and conspiracy theories, offering facts in place of myths. But how can we make science more digestible and appealing? Counterintuitively, it might be less facts and more emotions that can help to make science more appealing, more impactful – both when communicating to the public and to fellow scientists. In episode 28 of We’re doomed, We’re saved, Andreas Horchler and Louise von Stechow discuss strategies for scientific storytelling, drawing on principles that go back to ancient Greece and draw from modern brain science. Spoiler: It´s not as hard as it may look.
Content and Editing: Louise von Stechow and Andreas Horchler

Disclaimer: Louise von Stechow & Andreas Horchler and their guests express their personal opinions, which are founded on research on the respective topics, but do not claim to give medical, investment or even life advice in the podcast.

Learn more about the future of biotech in our podcasts and keynotes. Contact us here: scientific communication: https://science-tales.com/ Podcasts: https://www.podcon.de/ Keynotes: https://www.zukunftsinstitut.de/louise-von-stechow

Image: FUJIFILM, X100F via Unsplash Further reading: Cron, Lisa: "Wired for story, The Writer's Guide to Using Brain Science to Hook Readers from the Very First Sentence" Clarkson Potter/Ten Speed, 2012 Gallo, Carmine: "Talk like Ted" Main Market Edition, 2022