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"Business Humor"
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The Aggretsuko guide to office life
\"Aggretsuko is all the RAGE. A 25-year-old red panda who's Sanrio's newest character and has her own Netflix show, Aggretsuko lives a stressful work life that's all too relatable. In this helpful handbook, Aggretsuko offers tips on how to deal with annual holiday parties, avoid colleagues after hours, circumvent oversharing coworkers, and most importantly--how to RAGE (preferably in heavy-metal karaoke sessions). A must-have for anyone who needs help staying sane from 9 to 5.\"--Provided by publisher.
Learning in 3D
by
O'Driscoll, Tony
,
Kapp, Karl M
in
BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Human Resources & Personnel Management
,
BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Humor see HUMOR / Topic / Business & Professional
,
BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Imports see Exports & Imports
2010
Praise for Learning in 3D \"Learning is the key to our future and powerful learning will result from immersive, interactive, and creative 3D designs. Tony O'Driscoll and Karl Kapp have written a disruptive book about a disruptive technology that we all need to explore. This is a must read!\" -Elliott Masie, chair, The LearningCONSORTIUM \"Karl Kapp and Tony O'Driscoll are, amazingly, both the best theorists and practitioners in using virtual worlds in every type of educational venue. Many will love their vision, but I am more hooked on their practicality and hand-holding.\"-Clark Aldrich, author, Learning Online with Games, Simulations, and Virtual Worlds: Strategies for Online Instruction \"Kapp and O'Driscoll nailed it. The right balance of case studies, theories and practical advice for any organization pursing the use of virtual worlds for learning. If you are interested in virtual worlds for learning and collaboration, this book is for you.\" -David A. Manning, managing partner, Performance Development Group \"The big contribution of Learning in 3D is that it provides research informed guidance and practical tips and techniques for using 3D virtual environments to achieve real business results...the case studies are outstanding.\" -Lisa Clune, president, Kaplan EduNeering \"As the world makes its way through a period of significant change, Learning in 3D couldn't come at a better time. Today, organizations and individuals are being challenged to make the most of learning collaboratively. This book stimulates our thinking on how to maximize the impact of technology, while providing a practical blueprint-with 'revolutionary' examples-of how to bring a new dimension to learning.\" -John Malitoris, regional managing director, Duke Corporate Education \"Tony O'Driscoll and Karl Kapp remind us that learning is the fourth dimension-and the one that really
counts in collaboration. A must-read for the future of learning in environments virtual and otherwise.\" -Cathy Davidson, Ruth F. DeVarney Professor of English at Duke University and co-director HASTAC/MacArthur Foundation Digital Media and Learning Competition.
Laugh and learn : 95 ways to use humor for more effective teaching and training
2003,2002
A stand-up comic used her day job teaching traffic school to launch a training career. The results are nothing to laugh at!.
Startup Strategy Humor
The purpose of this book is to make it simple and easy to understand startups—with an element of fun thrown in. Globally, \"startups\" are in vogue these days. In India too, the trend is catching up and the government is also encouraging startups. Though there is a growing interest in the subject and the number of startups is increasing, there is also a huge mortality rate of startups. Though interest in startups is increasing in India and many people want to go for startups, they stay away from startups for a number of reasons including the complexities involved and the concerns about possible failure. The purpose of this book is to make it simple and easy to understand startups—with an element of fun thrown in. This book explains 30 concepts related to startups in an innovative way. The author sincerely hopes to bring down the concepts of startups from ivory tower and to demystify and democratize startups for the masses.
Bacteriology of humans
2008,2009
1st Prize, 'New Authored Books' category, Royal Society of Medicine and Society of Authors Medical Book Awards 2008 \"Overall, I am impressed by the up-to date information content and structure provided in Bacteriology of Humans. It is truly an ecological perspective helpful for undergraduate/graduate majors in microbiology and immunology.\" –American Society for Microbiology, June 2009 \"Wilson provides the reader with an up-to-date, comprehensive census of the indigenous microorganisms that inhabit the human body and in so doing contributes significantly to this rapidly advancing area of study. The narrative is clearly written; the index is excellent; there are numerous bibliographic citations. Each chapter is rich with tables, diagrams, color micrographs, and charts … Highly recommended.\" –Choice Reviews \"This comprehensive, yet accessible text... is an excellent and informative reference book… it should be on the shelf of every major science and medical library. The content, organization, and presentation make this book a unique resource.\" –Doody's Book Reviews Until recently, the indigenous microbiota of humans has been a relatively neglected area of microbiology with most attention being focused on those microbes that cause disease in humans, rather than on those that co-exist with us in the disease-free state. However, in the past decade research has shown that not only is the indigenous microbiota involved in protecting humans from exogenous pathogens but it is also involved in our development and nutrition. Consequently, interest has grown substantially among health professionals and scientists in analyzing and understanding these microbial (largely bacterial) communities. This comprehensive, yet accessible text provides an up-to-date guide to the development, composition and distribution of indigenous microbial communities of humans. With the aid of abundant colour figures, diagrams, tables and maps, it establishes links between the physicochemical factors prevailing at an anatomical site and the types of microbes to be found there. The book includes an introduction to the human-microbe symbiosis as well as an in-depth look at the main systems and organs of the human body that have an indigenous microbiota. Each chapter includes a list of references for further study. This is an excellent and informative reference book that is useful to anyone with an interest in microbiology, medical microbiology, microbial ecology, infectious diseases, immunology, human biology, medicine, dentistry, nursing, health sciences, biomedical sciences or pharmacy – it should be on the shelf of every major science and medical library. Hallmark Features: * Provides a comprehensive, yet accessible, reference book on the human microbiota * Lavishly illustrated with colour figures, diagrams, tables and maps * Each chapter provides a list of references to promote further study * Each chapter contains links to key websites * Offers an ecological approach that explains why certain organisms are associated with a particular anatomical site
Impact of anthropomorphic features of artificially intelligent service robots on consumer acceptance: moderating role of sense of humor
by
Zhang, Mengying
,
Gursoy, Dogan
,
Zhu, Zhangyao
in
Anthropomorphism
,
Artificial intelligence
,
Classification
2021
Purpose
This study aims to investigate the impact of both physical and personality-related anthropomorphic features of an artificial intelligence service robot on the cognitive and affective appraisals and acceptance of consumers during service delivery.
Design/methodology/approach
The proposed hypotheses that investigate the effects of service robots’ physical appearance on the emphasis consumers place on each evaluation criteria they use in determining their willingness to accept the use of service robots in service delivery and the moderating role of sense of humor are tested by conducting two studies using scenario-based experiments.
Findings
The results show that humanlike appearance leads to higher performance expectancy, mascot-like appearance generates higher positive emotions and machine-like appearance results in higher effort expectancy. The effects of humanlike and mascot-like appearances on consumer acceptance are moderated by the sense of humor of service robots. However, the sense of humor effect is attenuated with a machine-like appearance owing to the lack of anthropomorphism.
Practical implications
This study provides crucial insights for hospitality managers who plan to use service robots in service delivery. The findings highlight the key roles of appearance type and sense of humor of service robots in influencing the appraisals and acceptance of consumers regarding the use of service robots in service delivery.
Originality/value
This study focuses on comparing the effects of traditional and mascot-like appearances of service robots on consumer appraisals and identifies sense of humor as a cute anthropomorphized personality trait of service robots.
Journal Article
Employee Humor Can Shield Them from Abusive Supervision
by
Huang, Mingpeng
,
Ju, Dong
,
Liu, Shengming
in
Business ethics
,
Conservation
,
Employee behavior
2023
Drawing upon conservation of resources theory, we develop and test a theoretical model that specifies how and when employee humor toward leaders affects leader abusive supervision. We propose that employee humor is negatively associated with leader abusive supervision via leader relational energy. Furthermore, the negative indirect relationship between employee humor and leader abusive supervision via leader relational energy is stronger for female leaders than for male leaders. An experiment and a multi-wave, multi-source field study provide substantial support for our hypotheses. Our findings contribute to the abusive supervision literature by identifying employee humor as a safe and effective bottom-up approach to prevent leader abusive supervision.
Journal Article