12-21-2024, 04:28 PM
Kpat A Complete Guide to Superheroes Religious Backgrounds
In a new study, researchers found that people wearing lab coats were better at paying attention and performing tasks accurately than those not wearing the white jackets associated with medical professionals a stanley thermos nd scientists. Researchers at Northwestern University asked study subjects to don a white lab coat like the kind your doctor probably wears, and that we associate with hard-at-work scientists. Then they measured their ability to focus by having them perform Stroop test tasks, such as naming the color green, for example of a word red, for example spelled out on a computer screen stanley cup . Those wearing lab coats got the color right twice as often as those who didn ;t wear one. Turns out you should dress for the brain you want, not the one you have. Interestingly, they didn ;t see the same effect when they told the volunteers that the jacket was a visual artist coat鈥?stanley cup deutschland only when they associated the coat with a medical professional or scientist. There seems to be something special about the physical experience of wearing a piece of clothing, write Hajo Adam and Adam Galinsky in their study. You don ;t say I think the $250 billion fashion industry would concur! [Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, via Miller-McCune] Image: Flickr/VintageDept FashionPsychologyScience Dqxe The Psychedelic Japanese Cityscapes Of Decades Past
Hey, sweetheart, nice iPhone. Nice Android, too. It matches your Hello Kitty mug and bra. In fact, it downright emasculati stanley cup ng, according to Google co-founder and Professional Computer Face Sergey Brin. So, stop throwing your manliness stanley vaso away. It takes a lot for an asinine comment at TED to surface above the asinine sea-froth that is TED itself, and yet, CNET reports: Speaking at the TED Conference today in Long Beach, Calif., Brin told the audience that smartphones are emasculating. You ;re standing around and just rubbing this featureless piece of glass, he said. I ;ve never felt like my smartphone drains my masculinity, but that could be due to not having very much to begin with, or because I ;m always using apps where I tap boobs and stuff. Guy stuff. Macho guy stuff. But Sergey disagrees: there something fundamentally emasculating about using a smartphone. Touching the glass. It hard to say what about rubbing a pie cups stanley ce of glass is castrating smartphone users, or what a more virile alternative would be. But it hard to imagine Google Glass, Brin obvious foil to the standard smartphone, as anything remotely virile: it a hugely dorky face accessory that has to be delicately spoken to or鈥攜ep!鈥攔ubbed in order to function. I mean, just look at that guy. [CNET] GoogleGoogle GlassSergey BrinSmartp
In a new study, researchers found that people wearing lab coats were better at paying attention and performing tasks accurately than those not wearing the white jackets associated with medical professionals a stanley thermos nd scientists. Researchers at Northwestern University asked study subjects to don a white lab coat like the kind your doctor probably wears, and that we associate with hard-at-work scientists. Then they measured their ability to focus by having them perform Stroop test tasks, such as naming the color green, for example of a word red, for example spelled out on a computer screen stanley cup . Those wearing lab coats got the color right twice as often as those who didn ;t wear one. Turns out you should dress for the brain you want, not the one you have. Interestingly, they didn ;t see the same effect when they told the volunteers that the jacket was a visual artist coat鈥?stanley cup deutschland only when they associated the coat with a medical professional or scientist. There seems to be something special about the physical experience of wearing a piece of clothing, write Hajo Adam and Adam Galinsky in their study. You don ;t say I think the $250 billion fashion industry would concur! [Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, via Miller-McCune] Image: Flickr/VintageDept FashionPsychologyScience Dqxe The Psychedelic Japanese Cityscapes Of Decades Past
Hey, sweetheart, nice iPhone. Nice Android, too. It matches your Hello Kitty mug and bra. In fact, it downright emasculati stanley cup ng, according to Google co-founder and Professional Computer Face Sergey Brin. So, stop throwing your manliness stanley vaso away. It takes a lot for an asinine comment at TED to surface above the asinine sea-froth that is TED itself, and yet, CNET reports: Speaking at the TED Conference today in Long Beach, Calif., Brin told the audience that smartphones are emasculating. You ;re standing around and just rubbing this featureless piece of glass, he said. I ;ve never felt like my smartphone drains my masculinity, but that could be due to not having very much to begin with, or because I ;m always using apps where I tap boobs and stuff. Guy stuff. Macho guy stuff. But Sergey disagrees: there something fundamentally emasculating about using a smartphone. Touching the glass. It hard to say what about rubbing a pie cups stanley ce of glass is castrating smartphone users, or what a more virile alternative would be. But it hard to imagine Google Glass, Brin obvious foil to the standard smartphone, as anything remotely virile: it a hugely dorky face accessory that has to be delicately spoken to or鈥攜ep!鈥攔ubbed in order to function. I mean, just look at that guy. [CNET] GoogleGoogle GlassSergey BrinSmartp