
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Mass shootings, bullying and retaliation, and other acts of violence -- why did the human brain evolve to be so aggressive? Dr. Heather Berlin, assistant professor of psychiatry at the Icahn School of Medicine, talks about the genetics of violence, the "mean girl" phenomenon, and why some psychopaths end up in jail while others land in the corner office.
By Weill Cornell Medicine Neurological Surgery4.7
142142 ratings
Mass shootings, bullying and retaliation, and other acts of violence -- why did the human brain evolve to be so aggressive? Dr. Heather Berlin, assistant professor of psychiatry at the Icahn School of Medicine, talks about the genetics of violence, the "mean girl" phenomenon, and why some psychopaths end up in jail while others land in the corner office.

38,593 Listeners

43,538 Listeners

27,108 Listeners

12,788 Listeners

4,211 Listeners

14,972 Listeners

31,841 Listeners

3,753 Listeners

14,416 Listeners

8,219 Listeners

1,611 Listeners

10,514 Listeners

21,016 Listeners

11,502 Listeners

1,756 Listeners