This episode looks at neuroscience and organizational change. My guest on this podcast, Hilary Scarlett, is both a practitioner and an author and in the most recent edition of her book, she brings together the neuroscience of organizational change. I was particularly interested in getting this guest on as she has those two different perspectives.
Your references as always ;-))
Hilary Scarlett on Twitter
Book: Neuroscience and Organisational Change by Hilary Scarlett
Social pain:
Eisenberger, NI, Lieberman, MD, & Williams, KD (2003) Does rejection hurt? An fMRI study of social exclusion. Science, 302, 290-292
‘Best in show’: cortisol and the impact on behaviour (and on dogs!):
Jones, AC, and Josephs, RA, (2006) Interspecies hormonal interactions between man and the domestic dog, Hormones and Behaviour 50 pp393-400
Mehta, PH, Jones, AC, and Josephs RA (2008) The social endocrinology of dominance: basal testosterone predicts cortisol changes and behaviour following victory and defeat, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 94 (6) pp1078-93
Sherman et al (2016) Sex differences in cortisol’s regulation of affiliative behaviour Hormones and Behaviour
Learning later in life:
Feldman Barrett, L, (2017) How ‘superagers’ stay sharp in their later years, The Observer 30 April 2017. https://www.theguardian.com/science/2017/apr/30/work-on-your-ageing-brain-superagers-mental-excercise-lisa-feldman-barrett
If you would prefer to read the podcast click here: Transcription – Episode 39 – Emotion at Work in Neuroscience and Organisational Change