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The Oxford Review Podcast

The Oxford Review
Chatbots
Systems Thinking
Industry 4.0
Corporate Leadership 4.0
Extremism
Artificial Intelligence
Spiral Dynamics
Motivation
Cognitive Closure
Significance and Dignity
Trust In Technology
User Experience
High Reliability Organizations
Organizational Change

The very latest research briefings about leadership, management, organisational and human development (inc. coaching and work psychology) from OR Briefings an Oxcognita LLC service

PublishesInfrequentlyEpisodes81Founded8 years ago
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ManagementBusiness

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Artwork for The Oxford Review Podcast

Latest Episodes

In 2023, David talks to John Grisby about Systems Thinking

For full podcast notes and links, go to: oxford-review.com/systems-thinking-interview-with-john-grisby/

In this episode, David talks to Dr. Athar Ahmad Bhatti about Problems with chatbots.

For full podcast notes and links, go to: oxford-review.com/problems-with-chatbots-interview-with-dr-athar-ahmad-bhatti/

In this episode, David talks to Arie W. Kruglanski about the psychology of extremism: How motivational imbalance breeds intemperance.

For full podcast, notes, and links, go to:

In this episode David talks with Julia Wire and Esther Flanagan from the UK College of Policing about methods of reducing sexism in the police and a paper they recently published. For full notes go to: oxford-review.com/tackling-sexism-and-m... more

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Recent Guests

John Grisby
Professor in management practice, University of Bedfordshire
University of Bedfordshire
Episode: Systems Thinking
Athar Bhatti
Enterprise architect and program manager researching chatbots in Kenya
Independent researcher / IT and transformation practitioner
Episode: Problems with chatbots
Arie Kruglanski
Professor at the University of Maryland, social psychologist
University of Maryland
Episode: On the psychology of extremism: How motivational imbalance breeds Intemperance

Reviews

4.5 out of 5 stars from 10 ratings
  • Great Topics, Terrible Audio

    This is a great idea and they have good topics but the recording is very hard to listen to for an extended period of time. You can hear breathing, echos and sound is bouncing off of every surface. Please fix this... the sound quality makes the podcast unlistenable.

    Apple Podcasts
    3
    GinaMarie28
    United States5 years ago
  • Practical, informative and to the point

    Thanks David and the Oxford Review team, I really enjoy your Podcasts as a way to have a quick listen before delving further into the research. What I love most is the easy to understand and apply learnings from the research your team carefully and thoroughly trawls day though so I don’t have to. Very appreciated!!!!

    Apple Podcasts
    5
    Bear_Aqua_1789
    Australia6 years ago

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Talking Points

Recent interactions between the hosts and their guests.

On the psychology of extremism: How motivational imbalance breeds Intemperance
Q: How can organizations apply these insights to prevent toxic extremism in the workplace?
Organizations should recruit and cultivate individuals who are passionate but maintain cognitive flexibility and openness to alternatives, balancing drive with collaboration and attention to other core needs.
On the psychology of extremism: How motivational imbalance breeds Intemperance
Q: What do you mean by motivational imbalance, and how does it cause extreme behavior?
Motivational imbalance occurs when one basic need becomes overpowering, rendering other needs subordinate; this shift expands the range of permissible behaviors and can push people toward extreme actions or sustained single-minded focus.
On the psychology of extremism: How motivational imbalance breeds Intemperance
Q: Could you just give us an overview of what led up to this particular paper in this piece of research?
The team hypothesized that extremism is not limited to violence—it can emerge from a common psychological dynamic across diverse domains, driven by a dominant need that suppresses others, and that a cross-disciplinary collaboration helped uncover this broader pattern.

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Recent guests on The Oxford Review Podcast include:

1. John Grisby
2. Athar Bhatti
3. Arie Kruglanski

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