Julia Shaw: Criminal Psychology of Murder, Serial Killers, Memory & Sex | Lex Fridman Podcast #483

· systems · Source ↗

Summary based on the YouTube transcript and episode description. Prompt input used 79979 of 168406 transcript characters.

Criminal psychologist Julia Shaw argues most murder is impulsive conflict, not psychopathy, and that lie detection by police is no better than chance.

  • ~70% of men and >50% of women have fantasized about killing someone, yet homicide recidivism is only 1–3%.
  • Police and investigators detect lies at chance level, yet carry high confidence — a major driver of wrongful convictions.
  • Most murders are fights that escalate over trivial disputes (a stolen bike, a $4 debt), not premeditated acts by psychopaths.
  • Volkswagen’s Dieselgate defeat device emitted nitrogen oxides at 40x legal limits for ~10 years before exposure; Shaw frames it as conformity and rationalization, not cartoonish villainy.
  • High-recidivism crimes are fraud, elder abuse, and sexual violence — not murder — meaning sentencing priorities are inverted if the goal is safety.
  • Shaw co-founded Spot with Evernote founder Phil Libin to administer the cognitive interview via chatbot for workplace compliance reporting; the UK Bar Council uses it.
  • Shaw has aphantasia — she cannot visualize mental imagery at all — which she argues may explain why mnemonic memory techniques never worked for her.

Guests: Julia Shaw — criminal psychologist, author of Evil, The Memory Illusion, Bi, and Green Crime; co-founder of Spot (talktospot.com) · 2025-10-14 · Watch on YouTube