1 00:00:00,440 --> 00:00:03,480 Speaker 1: I'm at, I'm no, I'm Ben, and we are stuff 2 00:00:03,520 --> 00:00:06,080 Speaker 1: they don't want you to know. Each week we cover 3 00:00:06,160 --> 00:00:09,719 Speaker 1: the latest and strangest in fringe science, government cover ups, 4 00:00:09,800 --> 00:00:13,399 Speaker 1: allegations of the paranormal, and more. New episodes come out 5 00:00:13,440 --> 00:00:16,880 Speaker 1: every Friday on iTunes, Spotify, Google Play, and anywhere else 6 00:00:16,960 --> 00:00:24,360 Speaker 1: you get your podcasts. Welcome to brain Stuff from How 7 00:00:24,400 --> 00:00:32,440 Speaker 1: Stuff Works. Hey, brain Stuff, this is Christian Seger. Everyone 8 00:00:32,520 --> 00:00:35,920 Speaker 1: has a name. I just gave you mine. That's extraordinary, though, 9 00:00:35,960 --> 00:00:38,080 Speaker 1: when you think about it, because it's one of the 10 00:00:38,280 --> 00:00:41,280 Speaker 1: very few social things that all human beings have in common. 11 00:00:41,400 --> 00:00:43,879 Speaker 1: No matter who you are, where you live, or what 12 00:00:43,960 --> 00:00:47,240 Speaker 1: you do with your life, you and everyone else has 13 00:00:47,240 --> 00:00:50,880 Speaker 1: a name. You might be a Kevin, a Felicia, a Mohammed, 14 00:00:51,000 --> 00:00:54,480 Speaker 1: a Holly, and so on. It's part of your identity 15 00:00:54,760 --> 00:00:58,000 Speaker 1: and helped separate you from the teeming mass of humanity. 16 00:00:58,280 --> 00:01:01,520 Speaker 1: But how much does your name affect you? Could it 17 00:01:01,640 --> 00:01:06,800 Speaker 1: determine your future? Well, it doesn't determine your life exactly. 18 00:01:07,400 --> 00:01:11,040 Speaker 1: Economists Steve Levitt and Roland Friar studied decades worth of 19 00:01:11,120 --> 00:01:13,800 Speaker 1: children's names, only to find that what your parents name 20 00:01:13,880 --> 00:01:17,480 Speaker 1: you doesn't really impact your economic future. So you're not 21 00:01:17,600 --> 00:01:20,880 Speaker 1: doomed to poverty just because your name is Earnest or something. 22 00:01:21,280 --> 00:01:24,959 Speaker 1: But your name will certainly affect your future. A study 23 00:01:25,040 --> 00:01:29,119 Speaker 1: called are You Ready? Are Emily and Greg more employable 24 00:01:29,280 --> 00:01:34,480 Speaker 1: than Lakisha and Jamal unearthed at least one disturbing trend 25 00:01:34,520 --> 00:01:39,840 Speaker 1: about names. Job applicants with equal qualifications or even otherwise 26 00:01:39,880 --> 00:01:44,000 Speaker 1: identical resumes are about fifty more likely to get a 27 00:01:44,080 --> 00:01:48,120 Speaker 1: callback if they have a white sounding name. This indicates 28 00:01:48,160 --> 00:01:52,800 Speaker 1: that despite numerous laws, discrimination still thrives in the workplace. 29 00:01:53,360 --> 00:01:56,120 Speaker 1: Your name doesn't just tell people about you. It tells 30 00:01:56,120 --> 00:01:58,720 Speaker 1: people about your parents and gives them away to place 31 00:01:58,960 --> 00:02:02,320 Speaker 1: you in their vision of society. This isn't about whether 32 00:02:02,360 --> 00:02:06,200 Speaker 1: their vision is correct. That's prejudice, but it does affect 33 00:02:06,240 --> 00:02:09,800 Speaker 1: how people with these expectations in mindsets will address and 34 00:02:09,919 --> 00:02:12,880 Speaker 1: interact with you. And that's not all. Your name may 35 00:02:12,919 --> 00:02:16,160 Speaker 1: also play a role in your career. This theory is 36 00:02:16,160 --> 00:02:20,079 Speaker 1: called nominative determinism, the idea that your name may affect 37 00:02:20,120 --> 00:02:23,760 Speaker 1: the way you interact with the world, including anything from 38 00:02:23,800 --> 00:02:27,680 Speaker 1: donations to your choice of career. For example, is someone 39 00:02:27,800 --> 00:02:31,720 Speaker 1: named Helen Painter more likely to be an artist? Or 40 00:02:32,160 --> 00:02:35,520 Speaker 1: is someone named Jimmy Hogg more likely to work with pigs. 41 00:02:36,280 --> 00:02:40,920 Speaker 1: Matthew Meirenberg and John Jones think so in their study 42 00:02:41,040 --> 00:02:44,040 Speaker 1: and here we go with another name, Why Susie sells 43 00:02:44,080 --> 00:02:48,200 Speaker 1: Seashells by the Sea Shore Implicit Egotism and Major Life 44 00:02:48,240 --> 00:02:52,560 Speaker 1: Decisions classic academic title. These researchers found that people are 45 00:02:52,600 --> 00:02:57,560 Speaker 1: more likely to choose careers whose labels resemble their own names. So, 46 00:02:57,880 --> 00:03:01,120 Speaker 1: to use one of their examples, people named Dennis or 47 00:03:01,160 --> 00:03:07,040 Speaker 1: Denise are overrepresented among can you guess it Yeah? Dentists. 48 00:03:07,440 --> 00:03:12,640 Speaker 1: Dentists Dennis, Denise. Mehrenberg and Jones believe this happens because 49 00:03:12,680 --> 00:03:16,359 Speaker 1: people prefer things that they connect with themselves, including their 50 00:03:16,400 --> 00:03:21,600 Speaker 1: own names. Other scientists, like University of Pennsylvania's Uri Simonson, 51 00:03:21,760 --> 00:03:25,200 Speaker 1: are skeptical about this whole idea. Are we drawing tenuous 52 00:03:25,200 --> 00:03:29,200 Speaker 1: conclusions where none exist just to support a neat idea? Well, 53 00:03:29,320 --> 00:03:33,400 Speaker 1: for the record, Simonson does suppose that nominative determinism might 54 00:03:33,560 --> 00:03:37,240 Speaker 1: explain why people named Rachel might be more likely to 55 00:03:37,320 --> 00:03:40,800 Speaker 1: donate in the wake of Hurricane Rhea. Because, as weird 56 00:03:40,840 --> 00:03:44,280 Speaker 1: as this might sound, that similarity just starting with the 57 00:03:44,360 --> 00:03:49,119 Speaker 1: letter are triggered some sense of identification. We haven't even 58 00:03:49,120 --> 00:03:52,080 Speaker 1: talked about name changes or the weird name changes people 59 00:03:52,080 --> 00:03:56,240 Speaker 1: have tried in court. I'm looking at you, Romantico, Sir 60 00:03:56,360 --> 00:04:00,920 Speaker 1: Tasty Maximilian, Yeah, that is his real name. We haven't 61 00:04:00,960 --> 00:04:05,960 Speaker 1: talked about all the multi generational popularity cycle they experience either, or, 62 00:04:06,400 --> 00:04:09,080 Speaker 1: as we like to call it, the rise and fall 63 00:04:09,280 --> 00:04:17,920 Speaker 1: of the Brittney's and Ashley's. Check out the brain Stuff 64 00:04:18,000 --> 00:04:20,360 Speaker 1: channel on YouTube, and for more on this and thousands 65 00:04:20,360 --> 00:04:36,360 Speaker 1: of other topics, visit how stuff works dot com