Mind Field
Mind Field is an American web television series created, produced, and hosted by Michael Stevens, known for his educational YouTube channel Vsauce, that delves into the complexities of human psychology and behavior through a combination of scientific experiments, expert interviews, and personal investigations.[1] Premiering on January 18, 2017, as a YouTube Premium original, the show explores topics such as isolation, conformity, artificial intelligence, psychedelics, and free will, often featuring real-world replications of classic psychological studies. It ran for three seasons, each consisting of eight episodes, concluding in 2019, and has garnered critical acclaim for its engaging and thought-provoking approach to science communication.[2] The series distinguishes itself by blending entertainment with rigorous inquiry, where Stevens participates in the experiments to provide firsthand insights, making abstract concepts accessible to a broad audience.[3] Season 1, for instance, examined phenomena like the effects of solitary confinement and social pressure, drawing from historical studies such as the Stanford prison experiment.[4] Subsequent seasons expanded to cover emerging fields like neurotechnology and altered states of consciousness, emphasizing ethical considerations in psychological research.[5] With an IMDb rating of 8.7 out of 10 based on over 2,800 user votes, Mind Field has been praised for its innovative format and ability to spark curiosity about the human mind.[6]Overview
Premise
Mind Field is a documentary web series that investigates the complexities of human behavior, the brain, and consciousness through a combination of real-world experiments, expert interviews, and host-led demonstrations.[7] Hosted by Michael Stevens, the series delves into psychological and neurological phenomena, revealing how the mind processes perceptions, makes decisions, and responds to social pressures.[6] Each episode presents these topics in an accessible manner, often using volunteer participants in controlled setups to illustrate concepts such as optical illusions and moral dilemmas.[4] Episodes typically run 20 to 35 minutes and follow a structured format that blends narrative storytelling with scientific explanations and ethical discussions.[8] This approach covers topics ranging from memory and free will to social influence, incorporating rare footage from historical experiments alongside original demonstrations to highlight both the wonders and potential pitfalls of the human psyche.[7] The series emphasizes conceptual understanding, showing how everyday experiences can be influenced by subtle psychological forces.[6] Over its run, Mind Field progresses thematically from basic perceptual tricks and sensory deprivations in the first season to more intricate explorations of societal and ethical issues in subsequent seasons, such as the impacts of technology on cognition and the nature of heroism.[4] This arc builds a comprehensive view of the mind field, encouraging viewers to question their own behaviors and beliefs through evidence-based inquiry.[7]Host and crew
Michael Stevens serves as the creator, writer, host, executive producer, and director of Mind Field, drawing on his background in psychology to explore human behavior through engaging experiments and explanations.[9] Born in 1986, Stevens earned a bachelor's degree in psychology and English from the University of Chicago, which informed his expertise in science communication prior to the series.[10] His prior work as the founder and host of the YouTube channel Vsauce, launched in 2010, established a distinctive style of blending philosophy, mathematics, and science in accessible videos that captivated millions, influencing the series' curious and exploratory tone.[11] In Mind Field, Stevens personally scripts episodes and participates in on-camera experiments, ensuring a hands-on approach to demystifying psychological concepts.[12] The production team includes key producers Phillip Barbb, Travis Dowell, Jen Friesen, and Andy Wood, who managed logistical and creative aspects of the series across its three seasons.[9] Cinematographer Matthew Novello handled the visual storytelling, capturing the dynamic experiments and interviews with a focus on clarity and immersion.[9] Composers Jake Chudnow and Russell Spurlock provided the original score, including the opening theme "Atlas" by Chudnow, which enhanced the series' atmospheric and intriguing mood.[9] Notable guest experts enriched the episodes with specialized insights; for instance, psychologist Philip Zimbardo appeared to discuss the Stanford Prison Experiment, offering historical context and analysis of its implications for situational influences on behavior.[13] Zimbardo's contributions, drawn from his role as the experiment's creator, provided authoritative psychological perspectives that complemented Stevens' explorations.[14]Production
Development
Michael Stevens conceived the idea for Mind Field as an extension of his Vsauce YouTube channel, focusing on exploring the human psyche through scientific experiments and demonstrations. After initial rejections from traditional television networks, Stevens successfully pitched the concept to YouTube in 2016, aligning with the platform's push for original premium content.[15] Developed as a YouTube Original under YouTube Red (later rebranded as YouTube Premium), the series received internal production support from the platform, emphasizing resources for conducting experiments and location-based filming rather than involvement from external studios.[16] Planning for the first season spanned several months prior to filming in September 2016, involving extensive research, expert consultations, and iterative idea refinement to select topics driven by Stevens' personal curiosity and their potential to engage audiences on psychological phenomena.[17] Episode topics were chosen for their scientific depth and ability to provoke thought, prioritizing subjects like perception, memory, and social behavior that resonated with Vsauce viewers while ensuring accessibility. Ethical considerations were central to the planning, with the production team implementing rigorous participant debriefings and safety protocols for all experiments to mitigate potential psychological impacts.[17] YouTube initially ordered an eight-episode first season, which premiered in January 2017. The series' strong reception led to its renewal for a second season in June 2017, alongside other YouTube Red originals, allowing for expanded scope. Subsequent seasons featured increasingly ambitious setups, building on lessons from initial production to incorporate larger-scale demonstrations and deeper explorations.[16][17]Filming techniques
The Mind Field series employs a documentary-style format that blends first-person narration by host Michael Stevens with real-world experiments to explore psychological phenomena, drawing on both historical research and original demonstrations to educate viewers on human behavior.[18] This approach features Stevens directly participating in the experiments alongside volunteers, providing an intimate perspective that underscores the personal stakes of the topics, such as isolation or ethical decision-making.[11] Filming techniques emphasize controlled, ethical setups for experiments, often using hidden cameras to capture authentic reactions from participants without influencing their behavior. For instance, in the episode examining the trolley problem, the production team utilized an abandoned railroad line, hired a freight train, and positioned hidden cameras to record subjects' responses to simulated life-or-death scenarios, ensuring all elements like actor placements and train footage were pre-recorded for safety.[19] Practical effects, including actors dressed as workers on the tracks and monitors displaying deceptive live-action footage, create immersive illusions while adhering to strict safety protocols, such as psychological pre-screening of volunteers, on-site trauma counselors, and thorough debriefings to mitigate any emotional distress.[19] These methods mirror IRB-like approvals common in psychological research, prioritizing participant well-being in controlled environments like labs or urban settings.[19] Visual production incorporates high-quality cinematography with dynamic camera work to heighten engagement, including on-location shots in research facilities and everyday spaces to ground abstract concepts in relatable contexts.[18] Animations and graphics illustrate complex brain processes, such as neural pathways during decision-making or sensory deprivation effects, enhancing conceptual clarity without overwhelming the narrative.[3] Studio recreations of classic experiments, like conformity tests with electric shocks, combine archival footage with modern reenactments to provide historical context alongside contemporary insights.[18] In post-production, the series undergoes meticulous editing by a collaborative team to maintain tight pacing across episodes typically running 21 to 34 minutes, allowing for concise yet thorough explorations of each topic.[15] Visual effects integrate seamlessly with live footage—for example, compositing pre-shot train sequences in the trolley dilemma to simulate urgency—while a tension-building musical score underscores ethical dilemmas and participant reactions, amplifying the educational impact without sensationalism.[19] This process, which extended over several months per season following a one-month principal photography period, ensures a polished, professional finish that aligns with Stevens' commitment to authentic science communication.[15]Release and availability
Premiere and seasons
Mind Field premiered exclusively on YouTube Premium (formerly YouTube Red) on January 18, 2017, as an original series produced by Vsauce.[6] The series was promoted through official trailers released on the Vsauce YouTube channel, highlighting its exploration of psychological phenomena and tying into the benefits of a Premium subscription for ad-free viewing and offline access.[1] The first season consisted of eight episodes released weekly, beginning with the first two episodes—"Isolation" and "Conformity"—on the premiere date, followed by one episode each subsequent week until "Do You Know Yourself?" on March 1, 2017.[20] Each season featured eight episodes that interconnected to delve deeper into psychological and neuroscientific concepts, with subsequent seasons building on the foundational themes introduced in prior ones, such as expanding from individual cognition to social influences and ethical dilemmas. Season 2 premiered on December 6, 2017, with the initial three episodes—"The Greater Good," "The Psychedelic Experience," and "Interrogation"—released simultaneously, then continuing weekly through "The Memory Hack" on January 24, 2018.[21] Season 3 followed on December 5, 2018, starting with "The Cognitive Tradeoff Hypothesis" and "Moral Licensing" on launch day, and concluding with "Mind Reading" on January 16, 2019.[22] In addition to the main seasons, three special episodes were released between 2018 and 2019: "The Origins of Disgust" on December 5, 2018, "I Watch 3 Episodes of Mind Field With Our Experts & Researchers" on October 14, 2019, and "What Is the Scariest Thing?" on October 24, 2019, offering extended explorations of disgust, expert reactions, and fear.[23]Removal from platform
The series concluded with the special episode "What Is The Scariest Thing?", which premiered on October 24, 2019, marking the end of its run without renewal for additional seasons.[24][25] Following the finale, on October 1, 2019, the episodes became freely available with advertisements on YouTube for all users, ending their exclusivity to YouTube Premium. They remain accessible in this manner as of November 2025, with no migration to other platforms. This shift aligned with YouTube's broader cancellation of its Originals program in 2021–2022, driven by cost-cutting measures and a pivot to an ad-supported model emphasizing user-generated content over in-house productions.[26][27][28] In the aftermath, select clips from the series have been shared on the Vsauce channel, such as a 2019 discussion video featuring experts reacting to episodes.[29]Episodes
Season 1 (2017)
Season 1 of Mind Field premiered on January 18, 2017, on YouTube Premium, consisting of eight episodes released weekly that delve into introductory psychological phenomena such as isolation, social conformity, and self-perception, setting the series' investigative tone through host Michael Stevens' personal experiments and volunteer tests.[30] The season emphasizes how environmental and social factors shape human behavior, using real-time demonstrations to illustrate core concepts in cognition and emotion without delving into advanced neuroscience.[4] The episodes are as follows:- Isolation (January 18, 2017): Stevens locks himself in a windowless, soundproof chamber for three days to test the impact of sensory deprivation, finding that the brain craves external stimuli and that prolonged isolation induces intense boredom, sometimes preferred less than mild pain based on referenced studies.[3]
- Conformity (January 25, 2017): Through experiments where participants select the shortest line among actors giving incorrect answers, Stevens demonstrates the powerful human tendency to conform to group opinions, even when they contradict personal perception.[31]
- Destruction (February 1, 2017): Stevens investigates catharsis theory by having volunteers destroy objects after anger induction, revealing that such acts may increase rather than alleviate aggression, challenging common assumptions about emotional release.[32][33]
- Artificial Intelligence (February 8, 2017): Exploring the boundary between human and machine cognition, Stevens interacts with AI chatbots and discusses ethical implications, highlighting how advanced systems can mimic human-like responses but lack true consciousness.[34]
- Freedom of Choice (February 15, 2017): Featuring guests like Physics Girl and Veritasium, Stevens tests decision prediction via brain scans and examines choice overload, concluding that fewer options often lead to greater satisfaction despite the value placed on autonomy.[35][36]
- Touch (February 22, 2017): Stevens uses a nocebo effect experiment disguised as a procedure on volunteers to show how expectations influence physical sensations, underscoring the mind's role in perceiving touch beyond mere sensory input.[37]
- In Your Face (March 1, 2017): By injecting Botox to freeze facial muscles and observing empathy in volunteers during staring contests, Stevens reveals the bidirectional link between facial expressions and emotions, where restricted expressions impair emotional recognition.[38][39]
- Do You Know Yourself? (March 8, 2017): Stevens manipulates participants' memories through suggestion to explore identity formation, finding that self-perception is malleable and prone to false recollections, questioning the reliability of personal narratives.[40][41]
Season 2 (2017–18)
The second season of Mind Field, premiered on December 6, 2017, via YouTube Premium, and concluded on January 3, 2018, comprises eight episodes that expand on psychological and neuroscientific inquiries by incorporating more interactive experiments with participants, focusing on interpersonal dynamics, therapeutic interventions, and the malleability of perception and behavior.[42][43] Building upon Season 1's foundational explorations of illusions and conformity, this season emphasizes advanced behavioral demonstrations, such as moral decision-making under pressure and the influence of suggestion on healing, often involving direct participant engagement to reveal the complexities of human cognition. The episodes highlight how external factors like drugs, technology, and social cues can profoundly shape individual and group responses, underscoring therapeutic potential in psychedelics and placebos while critiquing ethical boundaries in interrogation and heroism.[44]- The Greater Good (December 6, 2017): Host Michael Stevens stages a real-life recreation of the trolley problem, challenging participants to choose between sacrificing one person or allowing five to die in a simulated high-stakes scenario, revealing insights into utilitarian morality and emotional responses to ethical dilemmas.[19][45]
- The Psychedelic Experience (December 6, 2017): Stevens journeys to the Peruvian Amazon to partake in an Ayahuasca ceremony under shamanic guidance, with brain imaging by researcher Dr. Robin Carhart-Harris to demonstrate how psychedelics may foster self-healing and altered states of consciousness.[46][47]
- Interrogation (December 6, 2017): The episode probes the efficacy and ethics of interrogation methods, including truth serums, as Stevens undergoes injection with a sedative and endures techniques like good cop-bad cop to illustrate how they can elicit false confessions.[48][49]
- Your Brain on Tech (December 6, 2017): Stevens conducts a self-experiment by immersing in 3D video gaming for 10 days, followed by navigation tests in a large physical maze, to quantify technology's effects on spatial memory and cognitive processing.[50]
- How to Make a Hero (December 13, 2017): Drawing on psychologist Philip Zimbardo's hero training program, the episode tests participants' willingness to intervene as whistleblowers in a staged unethical experiment, highlighting the bystander effect and pathways to altruistic behavior.[51]
- The Power of Suggestion (December 20, 2017): Collaborating with researchers at a Montreal university, Stevens applies hypnotic suggestion and placebos to treat children with conditions like allergies and warts, showcasing the mind's capacity to influence physical healing through belief.[52][53]
- Divergent Minds (December 27, 2017): Stevens meets savants with exceptional abilities in music and geometric visualization, exploring neurodiversity and how atypical brain wiring can lead to extraordinary cognitive feats amid challenges like autism.[54]
- The Electric Brain (January 3, 2018): The finale examines electrical stimulation of the brain, from controlling insect movement to enabling paralyzed individuals to operate limbs via implants, demonstrating potential for mind-reading interfaces and therapeutic neuromodulation.[55]
Season 3 (2018–19)
The third and final season of Mind Field premiered on December 5, 2018, and concluded on January 16, 2019, comprising eight episodes that delved into advanced topics in cognitive science, moral psychology, neuroscience, and human behavior, often through experimental demonstrations and expert interviews to highlight cutting-edge research and its societal ramifications.[22] This season built on the series' exploration of the mind by addressing complex phenomena like evolutionary tradeoffs in intelligence, the malleability of beliefs, and the boundaries of consciousness, emphasizing ethical considerations in psychological experimentation akin to those discussed in prior production techniques.[22] The episodes are summarized in the following table, with each featuring host Michael Stevens conducting or observing experiments to illustrate key psychological concepts:| No. | Title | Air date | Overview |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | The Cognitive Tradeoff Hypothesis | December 5, 2018 | Stevens examines the evolutionary divergence between human and chimpanzee cognition, collaborating with researchers at Kyoto University's Primate Research Institute to demonstrate how enhanced social intelligence in humans may come at the cost of other cognitive abilities, such as short-term memory, through comparative tasks involving primates and human participants. |
| 2 | Moral Licensing | December 5, 2018 | The episode investigates moral licensing, where acts of perceived goodness enable subsequent unethical behavior, via an experiment testing whether charity donations increase participants' willingness to frame an innocent child for a crime in a simulated scenario. |
| 3 | The Stilwell Brain | December 12, 2018 | Focusing on the human brain's 86 billion neurons, Stevens models neural networks by transforming the town of Stilwell, Kansas—chosen for its population approximating the number of neurons—into a giant interactive brain simulation to visualize perception and motor functions. |
| 4 | The Stanford Prison Experiment | December 19, 2018 | Stevens reexamines the infamous 1971 Stanford Prison Experiment, questioning traditional interpretations of participant cruelty by recreating elements with modern ethical safeguards and consulting original researchers to explore situational versus dispositional factors in abusive behavior. |
| 5 | Should I Die? | December 26, 2018 | Partnering with death positivity advocate Caitlin Doughty, Stevens visits a cryonics facility to assess radical life-extension technologies, weighing personal and philosophical implications through discussions on mortality and an offer to cryopreserve his own body. |
| 6 | How to Talk to Aliens | January 2, 2019 | The episode explores protocols for extraterrestrial communication, drawing on SETI research to compose and transmit a personalized message into space via radio telescope, while debating the risks and psychological preparations for potential first contact. |
| 7 | Behaviour and Belief | January 9, 2019 | Stevens tests the formation of superstitious beliefs using a game show setup as a human operant conditioning chamber, and applies placebo effects in a "reverse exorcism" to shift irrational convictions toward scientific understanding. |
| 8 | Mind Reading | January 16, 2019 | Culminating the season, the episode investigates brain-computer interfaces for decoding thoughts, featuring neuroimaging studies to predict mental states and Japanese experiments attempting to reconstruct dream visuals from brain activity patterns. |