Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Guest Information
- Timestamps
- Related Resources
- Premium Content
- Detailed Study Notes
- Transcript
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Introduction
In this episode, Dr. Matthew Facciani explores how social psychology influences health beliefs and the spread of misinformation. The conversation delves into why people adopt certain nutrition or health beliefs so strongly, how identity and group membership shape our interpretation of evidence, and what makes us susceptible to false or misleading health claims.
Dr. Facciani’s interdisciplinary background (spanning neuroscience, psychology, and sociology) allows him to offer a unique evidence-informed perspective on these issues. The episode centers on understanding the social forces behind health-related attitudes and how we might improve communication and critical thinking in the face of rampant misinformation.
This topic is highly relevant for health professionals and researchers because misinformation about nutrition, health, and medicine can lead to poor decisions, vaccine hesitancy, or harmful fad diets. By understanding the psychological drivers that cause people to cling to unscientific beliefs, practitioners can better address patients’ concerns and correct false claims.
Guest Information

Matthew Facciani, PhD
Matthew Facciani is a postdoctoral researcher at The University of Notre Dame in the Computer Science and Engineering Department. He is an interdisciplinary social scientist with a background in neuroscience and psychology and holds a PhD in sociology.
His research focuses on media literacy, misinformation, social networks, political polarization, identities, and artificial intelligence.
Through his research and public engagement, Matthew strives to bridge the gap between academia and everyday conversations about truth, trust, and media literacy.
Timestamps
- [01:41] Interview start
- [06:57] The role of identities in belief formation
- [16:01] Health attitudes and political identities
- [25:28] Improving dialogue and addressing misinformation
- [31:59] Does fact-checking work?
- [35:41] Media literacy and pre-bunking
- [44:03] Optimism and pessimism for the future
- [52:28] Key ideas segment (premium-only)
Related Resources
- Join the Sigma email newsletter for free
- Subscribe to Sigma Nutrition Premium
- Enroll in the next cohort of our Applied Nutrition Literacy course
- Matthew’s book: ‘Misguided’
- Matthew’s academic publications
- Recommended episode: #365: David Robert Grimes, PhD – Conspiracy Theories & Bad Information: Why Are We Susceptible?
Premium Content
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