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Literature Review: Psychology Research & Reflection

Literature Review: Psychology Research & Reflection

Written by: Syed Imran Al-Hasyir
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About this listen

An audio series where I explore academic research through a personal lens. I explore studies on the mind, burnout, and emotional well-being, then reflect on how they echo in our everyday lives. Each entry is part research, part journal — an ongoing attempt to bridge knowledge with lived experience.

Syed Imran Al-Hasyir 2025
Hygiene & Healthy Living Psychology Psychology & Mental Health Self-Help Success
Episodes
  • You will replace AI
    Feb 22 2026

    We’ve all been there—staring at a blank screen, tempted to let AI do the heavy lifting. It’s fast, it’s easy, and it’s always right there. But is this digital shortcut actually a dead end for our brains?

    In this episode, we explore the “Crutch Effect” and why the struggle to find an answer is often more important than the answer itself. We dive into the research behind why AI-assisted practice can lead to lower exam scores and how you can shift your mindset from using AI as an engine to using it as a scaffold.

    Key Highlights

    * The Convenience Trap: Why AI is designed to tell you exactly what you want to hear, and why that’s a problem.

    * The Crutch Effect: Understanding the psychological cost of offloading our critical thinking.

    * The 17% Gap: A look at research showing that students who rely on AI tutors often underperform when the "safety net" is removed.

    * Illumination vs. Consumption: How to treat AI as a candle that lights the path rather than a fire that burns the work away.

    * Personal Reflections: Why "messing up" is the most underrated part of the creative process.

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    2 mins
  • Beyond Being Nice: The Psychology of People Pleasing
    Feb 1 2026

    Why do we keep saying "yes" to everyone else while our own world quietly falls apart? This episode dives into the psychology of Sociotropy and the "fawn" response, revealing how the safety we try to buy with compliance eventually leads to total burnout.

    Have you ever felt like a lightbulb that’s been left on for too long—working perfectly for everyone else until the moment you flicker out? We often mistake self-neglect for virtue, falling into Unmitigated Communion where we obsess over others' needs even while our own house is on fire. Today, we break down why "people pleasing" is a survival strategy, not a personality trait, and how to reclaim your "no" without the crushing weight of guilt.

    Whether you’re struggling with workplace burnout, social anxiety, or the exhaustion of being the "reliable one," this deep dive offers a psychological reframe to help you align who you are with who you want to be.

    In this episode, we discuss:

    • The "Fawn" Response: Why your brain chooses compliance over fight or flight.
    • Sociotropy vs. Kindness: The thin line between being helpful and being hollow.
    • The Cost of "Yes": How chronic people pleasing fuels anxiety and depression.
    • The Weight of Disappointment: Learning to go further by letting others' expectations go.

    Resources & Further Reading

    • The Disease to Please: Harriet Braiker’s foundational look at the "People-Pleasing Syndrome."
    • Sociotropy & Depression: Insights on the psychological link between social dependence and mental health (Beck, et al.).
    • Unmitigated Communion: The research by Helgeson & Fritz on the cost of focusing on others to the exclusion of the self.
    • The "Fawn" Response: Pete Walker’s exploration of people-pleasing as a trauma-based survival strategy.
    • Attachment at Work: Research from the Journal of Business and Psychology on how anxious attachment leads to professional burnout.
    • Modern Implications: Recent 2024–2025 meta-analyses on the links between people-pleasing, social anxiety, and neuroticism (PsyCh Journal).
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    2 mins
  • The Curse of Knowledge: Why We Can’t See What Others See
    Jan 25 2026

    Why is it so hard to understand someone else's perspective, even when the "truth" seems obvious? This episode explores Theory of Mind and the Curse of Knowledge, revealing the psychological gap that fuels miscommunication and how we can bridge it.

    Have you ever felt the frustration of explaining something "simple" to someone who just doesn't get it? We often navigate life with a "clean map," forgetting that others are walking a different path with "dirty shoes." Today, we break down the famous Sally-Anne task and look at how these childhood developmental milestones follow us into adulthood, biasing our logic and our relationships.

    Whether you’re looking to improve your communication skills, deepen your empathy, or simply understand the cognitive biases that cloud your judgment, this deep dive offers a practical reframe on what it means to truly listen.

    In this episode, we discuss:

    • The "Open Secret" of human misunderstanding.
    • How the Curse of Knowledge makes us arrogant.
    • Why adults fail perspective-taking just as much as children.
    • Turning "difficult people" into your greatest teachers.
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    2 mins
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