View allAll Photos Tagged behavior
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If there is ever a discrepancy between what someone does, and what someone says, always believe what they do. Actions nor behaviors ever lie.
I had never been able to capture this activity before, but it seemed to me that they were having issues.
A light dusting of pellet-like snow came through for a few minutes later in the day of our first snowfall, after the 1-2 cm had melted.
People with addictive behaviors are often intensely aware of the irreconcilable paradoxes of life, and therefore feel existential pain most acutely.
Deepak Chopra
State of Behavioral and Social Sciences
William T. Riley, Ph.D.
NIH Associate Director for Behavioral and Social Sciences
Director, Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Research, NIH
An example of microcopy provided by linkedin below its profile completeness bar. This drives user behavior by telling them the advantage of completing their profile. To read more about this and other web app best practices visit www.traffichoney.com
January 16, 2013 - "Deciding by Default: Lessons in Behavioral Economics" Penn Program on Regulation recently held a Risk Regulation Seminar on legal regulation based on behavioral economics led by Harvard Law professor, Cass Sunstein. Professor Sunstein described the issue with defaulting rules in business contracts, such as insurance plans, phone bills, loans, etc. He talked about the impact of impersonal one-size-fits-all rules for defaulting as well as the pros and cons of more personalized plans where customers can select their own rules for defaulting. Sunstein gives this latter option as a potential choice for future consumers in this new age of individuality and personalization. Professor Sunstein is the Felix Frankfurter Professor of Law at Harvard Law School and served as an attorney-advisor in the Office of the Legal Counsel of the U.S. Department of Justice. Sunstein has also been an administrator at the White House Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) in the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Professor Sunstein also served as the keynote speaker at the second Annual Regulation Dinner for the Penn Program on Regulation.
My work and these photos arrived back in Baltimore safe and sound today!
Emergent Behavior
Martin Art Gallery
Allentown, PA
What would you ask if you were a hiring manager? Write down and revise your answers until you've created stories you'll be comfortable telling. (Tip: Save them in a document you can amend and edit for each new interview. Here's a worksheet you can use to draft your stories.)
This bird is a killdeer (Charadrius vociferus) . It nests in rather open areas on shorelines and other wetlands. It's scientific name refers to it's habit of pretending in be injured while calling loudly to distract predators from it's nest.