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Josie rolling on the sandy banks of the Broad River, July 2011.

The Behavioral Operations Management Summer Institute for PhD students at the Ross School of Business of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor (BOMSI2019). The lead faculty were Ryan Buell (Harvard Business School), Stephen Leider (Ross School of Business, University of Michigan), and Jordan Tong (Wisconsin School of Business, University of Wisconsin-Madison). From the website, "The inaugural Behavioral Operations Management Summer Institute for PhD students will be held June 10-14, 2019, at the University of Michigan, Ross School of Business in partnership with the Center for Value Chain Innovation. The conference is co-sponsored by the business schools at the University of Michigan, and the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Support for this event is also being provided by Harvard Business School's Technology and Operations Management Unit. The 1-week intensive summer institute is designed to provide PhD students who are interested in behavioral research a solid foundation to conduct behavioral operations management research. Additionally, we hope that the summer institute will encourage collaboration and the creation of a research community among the next generation of researchers. Each day of the institute will include morning and afternoon sessions. Morning sessions will provide a general overview of BOM, review core behavioral economics/psychology topics, and discuss OM applications. Afternoon sessions will be focused more on small groups, practicums (e.g., applying ideas to actual research activity), and roundtables (more informal discussions). There will also be free time to prepare for the next day, have office hours, pair up to work on ideas, and hang out!" Pictures from the sessions taken over the week.

 

No feathering, no bleeding . . . ZERO bleed, even with my wettest writer and highlighting pens.

Sometimes an instinct of kindness conflicts with rules and regulations.

 

The North American Bird Banding Program

 

Bird banding is important for studying the movement, survival and behavior of birds. About 60 million birds representing hundreds of species have been banded in North America since 1904. About 4 million bands have been recovered and reported.

 

Data from banded birds are used in monitoring populations, setting hunting regulations, restoring endangered species, studying effects of environmental contaminants, and addressing such issues as Avian Influenza, bird hazards at airports, and crop depredations. Results from banding studies support national and international bird conservation programs such as Partners in Flight, the North American Waterfowl Management Plan, and Wetlands for the Americas.

 

The North American Bird Banding Program is under the general direction of the U.S. Geological Survey and the Canadian Wildlife Service. Cooperators include the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Mexico's National Commission for the Knowlege and Use of Biodiversity and Secretary of the Environment and Natural Resources; other federal, state and provincial conservation agencies; universities; amateur ornithologists; bird observatories; nature centers; nongovernmental organizations such as Ducks Unlimited and the National Audubon Society; environmental consulting firms and other private sector businesses. However, the most important partner in this cooperative venture is you, the person who voluntarily reported a recovered band. Thank you for your help.

 

U.S. Geological Survey

Canadian Wildlife Service

 

Please Report Bands at

www.reportband.gov

or

call 1-800-327-BAND

 

Photo from an exhibition at The Cooper Union (Oct. 4 – Nov. 18, 2022), curated by Anyone Corporation.

 

Supertall Superobject: Proposal for Collective Living IV (2022) by Office Kovacs

Behavior Study 4: this young Herring Gull repeated dropped and retrieved a stick in the water. Was it "play", skill training, or a mix of both?

Several articles are competing for most surreal.

Downtown, The Loop, Chicago, Illinois.

Thursday, January 25, 2024.

Every few weeks our older cat Cinnamon finds a new place to sleep, here is the latest. (This has been happening for 17 years)

i071507 031

Sex, Income, and Family Supportive Supervisor Behaviors, Allison Barrett, Stephanie Gulden (pictured), organization and management studies

BlogOpen is half working half socializing events for bloggers, social media user and communication professionalist.

Group behavioral games in Arua, Uganda.

This specie is a regular at the Visitor's Center. These Swallows get quite used to the presence of the visitors, and some have made their mud nests in the covered entry porch. They are easily approachable for close shots. This one is perched on a pipe corral adjacent to the Visitor's Center.

 

IMG_4474; Barn Swallow

Another one of my frog pond peepers from earlier this year. This one was a distinctive rusty red, quite different from the others. For such a tiny animal, they are amazingly loud. To learn more about frogs and how to identify them based on their calls, and to participate in citizen science efforts to monitor their populations, visit www.pwrc.usgs.gov/frogquiz/

Are you stressing about your relationship with your teenage child? Our website, www.talkingtoteens.com/, answers to all the question you might have about the problems every teen is facing nowadays.

Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is a behavioral treatment program to help people to have better thoughts, and feelings. To have instant result join online cognitive behavioral therapy courses at Resilico. For more visit us at resilico.com

This is where the Safari Park's 'animal ambassadors' live-- those animals that are not normally on exhibit but are sent out to meet the public on one of the zoo's outreach programs. That cheetah in the right middle of the shot was very excited to see us go through the gate, apparently she thinks anybody who visits is coming to see her or take her somewhere.

www.instagram.com/jeremymcgilvrey/?hl=en

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.

Room: UCC111

Professor D. Maheswaran (Mahesh)

New York University

Yaku showing the other girls how to pose like a model!

Baboon Metaphysics : the evolution of a social mind by Dorothy L. Cheney and Robert M. Seyfarth

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