Sentences with phrase «wrote professors of»

«Based on evidence gathered from focus groups and interviews conducted in U.S. coal communities, we argue that coal communities that have experienced mine closures have already begun an economic and social transition, one that is based on reshaping their culture and sense of identity,» wrote professors of Indiana University in a paper published in the March issue of Energy Research and Social Science.

Not exact matches

«We need to know what we're getting into,» warns Wendy Dobson, a professor at the Rotman School of Management at the University of Toronto who has written extensively on China.
«What we found is that people who spent money to buy time reported being almost one full point higher on our 10 - point [happiness] ladder, compared to people who did not use money to buy time,» wrote Elizabeth Dunn, an author of the study and a professor of psychology at the University of British Columbia.
«Paradoxically, big get - togethers can be easier to prioritize than smaller ones,» writes Vanderkam, offering the example of a busy professor who plans an annual getaway for her old college friends and their families.
Timothy A. Pychyl, a professor of psychology at Canada's Carleton University, has written on Psychology Today, that identity is «knowledge of who we are.
As University of Texas associate professor Richard J. Reddick writes for Fortune, King «unflinchingly held a moral mirror to the nation's face.»
Adam Grant, the Wharton professor who is Sandberg's friend and writing partner, has been by her side, offering the comfort of research into resilience and tools for emerging from grief.
«Dogs in the workplace can make a positive difference,» wrote principal investigator Randolph T. Barker, Ph.D. and professor of management in the Virginia Commonwealth University School of Business.
What happens, according to a paper Martin Schmalz, assistant professor of finance at University of Michigan wrote with Jose Azar and Isabel Tecu of Charles River Associates, is that stock ownership becomes too concentrated when companies like Blackrock or Vanguard, two large managers of index funds, vote the shares of passive funds.
Researcher Richard Wiseman, a professor at the University of Hertfordshire, has studied and written extensively about good fortune and says it's not chance at all, but a certain way of living that makes some people more serendipitous than others.
Martti Häikiö, an adjunct professor of social history at the University of Helsinki, who wrote Nokia: The Inside Story, argues Samsung is the company to beat.
«Based on a series of studies performed by our team over the past 5 years, this «dose» of exercise has become my prescription for life,» Benjamin Levine, a professor of internal medicine at the University of Texas Southwestern who wrote the study, said in a statement.
Cornell professor and economist Robert Frank, who wrote a book in the 1990s titled The Winner - Take - All Society: Why the Few at the Top Get So Much More Than the Rest of Us, made popular the belief that a big portion of the increase in the income gap has to do with the way a global market values its best performers, be they CEOs or athletes or actual performers.
So when three Facebook HR execs, along with Wharton professor Adam Grant, say in the HBR write - up of the findings, that «at Facebook, people don't quit a boss — they quit a job,» you should probably consider whether the same is true at your organization.
Written by Philip Auerswald, a professor of public policy at George Mason University and a senior fellow at the Kauffman Foundation, The Coming Prosperity: How Entrepreneurs Are Transforming the Global Economy is due out in April, but you can get a taste of Auerswald's most optimistic take on the entrepreneurship and global economy with this video of an animated, 10 - minute talk he gave recently to lawmakers.
«We find that industrial robots increase labour productivity, total factor productivity, and wages,» write lead researchers Georg Graetz, an assistant professor in the department of economics at Uppsala, and Guy Michaels, an associate professor in the department of economics at LSE.
In 1997, in the dawn of e-commerce, a New York University professor named Yannis Bakos wrote a well - regarded paper that predicted the internet would change pricing forever.
As Mark Thoma, professor of economics at University of Oregon, writes, «When we see income inequality rising, we ought to start looking for bubbles.»
«The next couple of months are crucial for the future of Ireland,» said Kevin O'Rourke, professor of Economic History at Oxford University, who has written extensively on Ireland's role in the Brexit talks.
«The gift date itself on average represents a turning point in the stock's trajectory, with company prices moving lower in the months after a gift is made,» David Yermack, a professor of finance at the NYU Stern School of Business, wrote in a 2008 article in the Journal of Financial Economics.
Philip M. Parker, Professor of Marketing at INSEAD Business School, has created a program that can write a non-fiction book in 20 minutes.
«The demand to effectively operate in unfamiliar environments and navigate cultural differences can be an intensive one, particularly when business travel requires meeting rigid schedules,» write professors Scott A. Cohen of the University of Surrey in the UK and Stefan Gössling of Linnaeus University in Sweden.
While initially, this may not seem to be the most useful content marketing feature, think of the app as enabling you to leave feedback the way a professor writes on your term paper.
A team of business professors hired by Apple has written case studies about the stores and other major Apple moves.
«The voice - command technology isn't ready,» Joel Cooper, a University of Utah research assistant professor and a co-author of the new studies, wrote in the studies» press statement.
, and often surprising (out of compassion, we're not going to draw undue attention to the professor who absolutely must listen to Britney Spears when she writes).
To investigate the impact of not looking our best on our behavior, Stanford professor Margaret Neale and PhD student Peter Belmi asked a group of both women and men to write about a time they felt either attractive or unattractive and then quizzed them on their attitudes to inequality and hierarchy.
Writing for Quartz recently, a team of business school professors summed up the current state of the research on personality and career performance, highlighting the many fascinating ways your personal traits are likely affecting your work and your bank balance.
History tells us that to influence Kim, we must empathize (note: not sympathize) with him, University of Connecticut professor Stephen Benedict Dyson writes in The Conversation.
«The history of automation in the broader economy has a reassuring message,» Penn radiology professor Saurabh Jha and Dr. Eric Topol, director of the Scripps Translational Science Institute wrote in a Tuesday JAMA article.
«The main result of this analysis is that the best clients of the aware brokers are significantly more likely than other clients to sell the stocks that the liquidating manager is offloading during the fire sale,» wrote Marco Di Maggio, assistant professor at Harvard Business School.
«The better able you are to get inside the head of your opponent,» Adam D. Galinsky, professor at Northwestern University's Kellogg School of Management, wrote in the Harvard Business School's Negotiation newsletter, «the better your negotiated outcomes are likely to be.»
«No one should be asked to leave a restaurant, rejected for an apartment or mistreated at work because of who they are,» Anthony Michael Kreis, a law professor at Chicago - Kent College of Law, wrote in an email to CNBC.
Todd Zenger, a professor at University of Utah's Eccles School of Business, wrote in the Harvard Business Review last year that pay transparency is «far from a panacea... [and] a double - edged sword, capable of doing as much — or more — damage as good.»
«Political connections appear to have played a role in the allocation of these funds,» wrote Alan Jagolinzer, professor at the University of Cambridge's Judge Business School.
And it was also several years ago that I suggested you take a look at a book on statistics written by a University of Toronto math professor.
«Clearly, this issue is of concern to experts,» write the report's five authors, including Babson professor Donna Kelley.
7th US Circuit Court of Appeals nominee Amy Coney Barrett, a Notre Dame law professor, was questioned intensely about her Catholic faith as a result of past writings expressing her beliefs on whether Catholic judges should recuse themselves from death - penalty cases if they believed they would be unable to impartially uphold the law, writing that — in limited situations — judges should step back in cases that conflict with their personal conscience.
The report's author, Professor Sir John Beddington, wrote that «commonly held negative perceptions surrounding HFT are not supported by the available evidence» but said that «policymakers are justified in being concerned about the possible effects of HFT on instability in financial markets.»
John Kindt, professor emeritus of business administration at the University of Illinois, has written passionately about how playing lotteries and other state - sanctioned gaming has a negative effect on local businesses.
In a Winter 2015 article published in the California Management Review, Harvard Business School Professor Karthik Ramanna writes that the rules on accounting and auditing are examples of «thin political markets» in which those who have the most to gain set the rules.
Jill Lepore, a Harvard history professor, wrote a lengthy takedown of Christensen's theory in a New Yorker article last year that accused him of misinterpreting his own case studies, which ranged from steel manufacturers to disk - drive - makers in the 1980s.
But it may be more difficult for tech firms to justify scanning conversations in other situations, said Ryan Calo, a University of Washington law professor who writes about tech.
«A more balanced news feed might lead to less «engagement,» but Facebook, with a market capitalization of more than $ 300 billion and no competitor in sight, can afford this,» wrote Tufekci, an associate professor at the School of Information and Library Science at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.
In an op - ed for The New York Times, Marc Mauer, executive director of the Sentencing Project, and David Cole, a professor of law and public policy at Georgetown University, write that many liberals and conservatives alike acknowledge the US criminal justice system needs reform.
«It had the tone of being heavily edited and perhaps even partially or significantly written by the PR professionals and the legal staff,» observes Cusumano, their former professor.
Here's Stanford business school professor Bob Sutton writing on the origins and importance of the idea way back in 2006:
As Tim Duy, a University of Oregon economics professor who is an avid Fed watcher, wrote in a recent blog: «When the Fed turns hawkish and steps up the pace of rate increases, is when we need to be increasingly concerned that, like all good things, this expansion will come to an end.»
Or check out this Australian writing professor's rundown of her personal «hateful eight» of common grammar errors.
University of Texas at Austin business professor Raj Raghunathan wrote a whole book to try to answer this tricky question.
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