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Val Curtis

👤 Person
90 total appearances

Appearances Over Time

Podcast Appearances

Freakonomics Radio
EXTRA: The Downside of Disgust (Update)

Fecal material, for example, is inherently disgusting. Every person on the planet, with a few strange exceptions, finds fecal material something they want to stay away from.

Freakonomics Radio
EXTRA: The Downside of Disgust (Update)

Fecal material, for example, is inherently disgusting. Every person on the planet, with a few strange exceptions, finds fecal material something they want to stay away from.

Freakonomics Radio
EXTRA: The Downside of Disgust (Update)

Fecal material, for example, is inherently disgusting. Every person on the planet, with a few strange exceptions, finds fecal material something they want to stay away from.

Freakonomics Radio
EXTRA: The Downside of Disgust (Update)

There's this real moment.

Freakonomics Radio
EXTRA: The Downside of Disgust (Update)

There's this real moment.

Freakonomics Radio
EXTRA: The Downside of Disgust (Update)

There's this real moment.

Freakonomics Radio
EXTRA: The Downside of Disgust (Update)

So people who are very high on the disgust scale often have comorbidities with other sorts of neuroticisms. So we found, for example, that people who are high on disgust are also high on sex disgust, and that makes it very hard to make a lasting bond in a relationship.

Freakonomics Radio
EXTRA: The Downside of Disgust (Update)

So people who are very high on the disgust scale often have comorbidities with other sorts of neuroticisms. So we found, for example, that people who are high on disgust are also high on sex disgust, and that makes it very hard to make a lasting bond in a relationship.

Freakonomics Radio
EXTRA: The Downside of Disgust (Update)

So people who are very high on the disgust scale often have comorbidities with other sorts of neuroticisms. So we found, for example, that people who are high on disgust are also high on sex disgust, and that makes it very hard to make a lasting bond in a relationship.

Freakonomics Radio
EXTRA: The Downside of Disgust (Update)

I work on hygiene, sanitation and water at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

Freakonomics Radio
EXTRA: The Downside of Disgust (Update)

I work on hygiene, sanitation and water at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

Freakonomics Radio
EXTRA: The Downside of Disgust (Update)

I work on hygiene, sanitation and water at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

Freakonomics Radio
EXTRA: The Downside of Disgust (Update)

There are very few disgustologists in the world. Surprisingly, there are not hordes of people screaming to study the science of disgust. But there are a growing number. And what got you into the disgust racket? It was a long journey, but there was a eureka moment that got me traveling this route.

Freakonomics Radio
EXTRA: The Downside of Disgust (Update)

There are very few disgustologists in the world. Surprisingly, there are not hordes of people screaming to study the science of disgust. But there are a growing number. And what got you into the disgust racket? It was a long journey, but there was a eureka moment that got me traveling this route.

Freakonomics Radio
EXTRA: The Downside of Disgust (Update)

There are very few disgustologists in the world. Surprisingly, there are not hordes of people screaming to study the science of disgust. But there are a growing number. And what got you into the disgust racket? It was a long journey, but there was a eureka moment that got me traveling this route.

Freakonomics Radio
EXTRA: The Downside of Disgust (Update)

So I've been working on trying to understand behaviors that made people sick, mostly in developing countries. trying to understand why people were hygienic or weren't hygienic. For example, we'd done interviews in lots of different countries and I was asking people, so when would you wash your hands? And they would say, well, when they feel sticky and disgusting.

Freakonomics Radio
EXTRA: The Downside of Disgust (Update)

So I've been working on trying to understand behaviors that made people sick, mostly in developing countries. trying to understand why people were hygienic or weren't hygienic. For example, we'd done interviews in lots of different countries and I was asking people, so when would you wash your hands? And they would say, well, when they feel sticky and disgusting.

Freakonomics Radio
EXTRA: The Downside of Disgust (Update)

So I've been working on trying to understand behaviors that made people sick, mostly in developing countries. trying to understand why people were hygienic or weren't hygienic. For example, we'd done interviews in lots of different countries and I was asking people, so when would you wash your hands? And they would say, well, when they feel sticky and disgusting.

Freakonomics Radio
EXTRA: The Downside of Disgust (Update)

And I go, well, what do you mean disgusting? And I kept coming up with these lists of things that people all around the world found disgusting. And it was a motley collection of things. I couldn't figure out what connected that all together. But then a colleague asked me to explain the cause of a strange parasitic disease. And I looked it up in a book about communicable diseases.

Freakonomics Radio
EXTRA: The Downside of Disgust (Update)

And I go, well, what do you mean disgusting? And I kept coming up with these lists of things that people all around the world found disgusting. And it was a motley collection of things. I couldn't figure out what connected that all together. But then a colleague asked me to explain the cause of a strange parasitic disease. And I looked it up in a book about communicable diseases.

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