Listing 1 - 10 of 1114 | << page >> |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
Choose an application
Choose an application
Lisa souffrait de boulimie, d’alcoolisme, de tabagisme et de surendettement. Un jour, tout a changé : en modifiant une pièce du puzzle de son existence, elle est sortie du cercle vicieux de ses habitudes toxiques. Comment Starbucks est-elle devenue un mastodonte générant plus de 10 millions de dollars de chiffre d’affaires par an ? En changeant une habitude de management. L’habitude est le pilote automatique de notre cerveau. S’appuyant sur les dernières recherches en psychologie et en neurosciences, Charles Duhigg en dévoile le fonctionnement et révèle ce principe élémentaire : si notre vie est faite d’habitudes clés qui régissent nos conduites à notre insu, il suffit d’en modifier un élément pour créer un cercle vertueux. En changeant de clés, vous ouvrirez des portes insoupçonnées !
Habit --- Habit --- Change (Psychology)
Choose an application
Choose an application
eebo-0018
Choose an application
Choose an application
Choose an application
Choose an application
Choose an application
"In the spring of 1911 the writer was called on by the Coca-Cola Company, of Atlanta, Ga., for an opinion as to the influence of caffein on mental and motor processes. In the absence of adequate reliable data (see discussion of previous investigations) it seemed necessary to conduct a set of careful experiments before any opinion could be rendered with either fairness or certainty, which was the task that this book took on. The results for each chapter's experiments are briefly summarized at the close of the chapters. It is clear at once that caffein influences all the tests in a given group in much the same way. The effect on motor processes comes quickly and is transient. The effect on higher mental processes comes more slowly and is more persistent. Whether this result is due to quicker reaction on the part of motor nerve centers, or whether it is due to a direct peripheral effect on the muscle tissue, the pure psychologist can hardly be expected to know. Physiological experiment, however, seems to indicate that caffein has a direct effect on the muscle tissue, and that this effect is fairly rapid in appearance. The physiology of absorption also explains the fact that the presence of food substance in the stomach retards and reduces the caffein influence. The dependence of the amount of the caffein influence on the body weight of the individual has already been explained in terms of the amount of the substance ingested per unit of tissue affected". (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2005 APA, all rights reserved).
Listing 1 - 10 of 1114 | << page >> |
Sort by
|