Catalogue Search | MBRL
Search Results Heading
Explore the vast range of titles available.
MBRLSearchResults
-
DisciplineDiscipline
-
Is Peer ReviewedIs Peer Reviewed
-
Item TypeItem Type
-
SubjectSubject
-
YearFrom:-To:
-
More FiltersMore FiltersSourceLanguage
Done
Filters
Reset
784
result(s) for
"Gray, Rob"
Sort by:
Rob Gray (1952–2020): A personal perspective on his achievements at the University of Dundee in the 1990s
2021
Purpose
This paper aims to pay tribute to Rob Gray’s achievements at the University of Dundee in the 1990s – a significant period in the development of the field of social and environmental accounting research.
Design/methodology/approach
Memories and reflections.
Findings
A personal perception of Rob’s drive, motivations and generosity of spirit.
Originality/value
A portrayal of someone who deserves to be remembered for what he accomplished, and for the collegiate and supportive example he set for others in pursuing social and environmental awareness and responsibility.
Journal Article
Wapping's women made it five wins in a... Derived Headline
by
Power, Lee
in
Gray, Rob
2019
Newspaper Article
Scotland omit Hardie following drug probe
in
Gray, Rob
2017
Former Highlanders flanker John Hardie is left out of Scotland's squad while he is reportedly the subject of an investigation into alleged cocaine use.
Newspaper Article
Choking Some people don't come through in stressful clutch situations
by
Lee Bowman Scripps
in
Gray, Rob
2012
When the typically solid free-throw sinker fails to find net in a close game's waning minutes, when the firm's best deal-sealer falters in the final round of negotiations, when a baseball team's closer becomes a blow-ser in the final inning -- the choke talk begins. University of Chicago psychology professor Sian Bielock, author of a widely hailed analysis of choking (\"Choke: What the Secrets of the Brain Tell You About Getting It Right When You Have To\") published in 2010, explains over-thinking as \"conscious attention to automatized physical operations that destroys the athlete's normal fluidity.\" In a paper published last October, Rob Gray of the University of Birmingham in England noted that athletes need to realize they're more apt to choke at a decisive moment. \"We think when you're under pressure, that your attention goes inward naturally. And focusing on what you're doing makes you mess up,\" Gray said of his study, which appeared in the journal Current Directions in Psychological Science. The next questions are why, and just how, the failure occurs.
Newspaper Article