Most psychologists would be thrilled to pack a lecture hall with a couple hundred people who want o hear about their latest research. But to Barry
Schwartz, PhD, that would be small potatoes. To date, more
than 2. 3 million people have watched him give an 18-minute
presentation on the paradox of choice.
That’s because Schwartz, a psychology professor at
Swarthmore College, stars in one of the 20 most popular
talks on TED, the nonprofit organization that puts on high-wattage conferences devoted to “ideas worth spreading,” then
shares those conference talks on its website ( www.ted.com/
talks). Schwartz’s talk is on the counterintuitive idea that the
abundance of choice in our modern world can leave us feeling
paralyzed rather than happy with our decisions.
TED began with a meeting in Northern California in 1984
organized by Saul Wurman, the architect and designer who
coined the phrase “information architecture.” That first meeting
focused on the three topics that still make up the conference’s
acronym: technology, entertainment and design. It featured an
early look at the Sony Compact Disc and a demonstration of
3-D graphics from Lucasfilm, according to TED’s website. It
took six years for Wurman to put on another conference, but
after that it became an annual event.
Today, the organization hosts two main conferences each
year and helps sponsor dozens of other locally organized
“TEDx” events worldwide. Speakers have included former
President Bill Clinton, Google founders Sergey Brin and Larry
Page, and physicist Stephen Hawking, among many others.
The organization’s public profile really took off in 2006,
when TED began posting videos of the pithy, 18-minutes-or-
less talks online. They’ve been a surprise hit, garnering more
than 100 million views on You Tube and the TED website. And
though TED started in the technology world, over the years
its mission has broadened and its organizers have shown an
affinity for psychology as well. More than a dozen psychologists’
talks are included on the website, including two in the top 20.
“It is interesting that so many of our best talks have
been about psychology,” says TED head Chris Anderson
— his official title is “curator.” “When we talk about ‘ideas
worth spreading,’ there have been so many amazing ideas
[in psychology] in the past decades — from evolutionary
psychology to positive psychology — that really shift how we
see ourselves. If you can explain some of that in 18 minutes,
that’s a very satisfying thing to do.”
The 18-minute time limit is key, says Anderson. TED
organizers look for speakers who can present their most
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