Applied behavioral science Search Results

Applied behavioral science Companies

No directory listings found matching your search. Do you want to submit your listing?

Applied behavioral science Articles

No articles about Applied behavioral science found. Want to add one?

Applied behavioral science Blogs

No blogs found for Applied behavioral science

Applied behavioral science Trips

No Applied behavioral science trips found - try browsing all trips »

Applied behavioral science Videos

Swarming at Ingenuity
Harnessing the power of a swarm. A collaboration between Ingenuity Festival and Science Café Cleveland Featuring: Dr. Dan Palmer (Computer Science, John Carroll University) Mr. Dave Williams (gametrainer.com) Mr. Kal Ivanov (Biology, Cleveland State University) Date: June 29, 2009 Time: Drinks start at 6:30 PM, discussion starts around 7:00 PM Location: Bodega on Coventry (1854 Coventry Rd., Cleveland Hts.) For most people, the word swarm conjures a mental image of millions of insects moving en masse from one place to another. Although some insects do swarm, they arent the only things that do. In fact, many important human activities such as air travel and sending packages can be modeled using swarms and the properties that emerge from the individual actions of swarm members. The challenge is figuring out exactly how such emergent properties arise, and how they can be integrated into programs to make the activities of humans (and robots) more efficient. Come to this months café to discuss swarms and swarming behavior from mathematical, biological, and applied perspectives, and to think about how swarm behavior can be used to help us better meet the challenges of everyday life! The diverse backgrounds of our experts should make for an engaging and interesting discussion. This event is being held as a collaboration between the Ingenuity Festival and the Science Cafe, and includes three parts: 1. Pre-activity discussion: 7 pm, Mon., June 29th, Bodega 2. Participatory human ...
Authors@Google: Jean Hanff Korelitz
The Authors@Google program welcomed Jean Hanff Korelitz to Google's New York office to read from and discuss her book, "Admission". "'The flight from Newark to Hartford,' begins "Admission," 'took no more than fifty-eight minutes, but she still managed to get her heart broken three times.' No lovesick youth, this is the voice of a college admissions officer at the center of this intricately plotted novel. While most Americans are preoccupied with tax season, millions of others carry another burden?college acceptance letters. (Fat or thin?) An engaging read, not yet another stereotypical look at crazed applicants, this novel provides distraction while awaiting the mail delivery. It allows students (and parents) to feel that the people making decisions are fallible humans, and it challenges readers to grasp the importance of what we admit to ourselves." - Chicago Tribune This event took place on June 16, 2009.
Keynote with Jeffrey Veen - highedweb 2008 Conference
highedweb 2008 Conference keynote by Jeffrey Veen, founding partner of Adaptive Path and project lead for Measure Map, the well-received web analytics tool recently acquired by Google.
Google Internet Summit 2009: Standards Session
Google Internet Summit 2009: The State of the Internet May 5, 2009 Google Internet Summit 2009 Internet Standards Session. Panelists include Zaheda Bhorat,Tony Rutkowski, John Klensin, Tina Dam, Erik Kline. On May 5 and 6, 2009, in Mountain View, we brought together Googlers and leaders from academia and the corporate world for a 2-day summit to discuss the state of the global Internet. The goal of the summit was to collect a wide range of knowledge to inform Google's future plans--from product development and market reach to users' expectations and our ability to keep the Internet open yet secure. More than 30 speakers and moderators led discussions around 8 topics: Networks; Wireless and Sensor Technologies; Security; Standards; Applications; Democracy, Law, Policy and Regulation; Search and Cloud Computing; and The Future. Eric Schmidt, who offered some remarks, expressed optimism that the challenges we face with governments' walling off access to the Internet can be overcome technologically by building networks that are transparent, scalable, and open.
Authors@Google: Gordon Bell & Jim Gemmell
Gordon Bell and Jim Gemmell visit Google's Mountain View, CA headquarters to discuss their book "Total Recall: How the E-Memory Revolution Will Change Everything." This event took place on September 25, 2009, as part of the Authors@Google series. In 1998, pioneering computer scientist Gordon Bell and his colleague Jim Gemmell at Microsoft began an experiment called mylifebits— an attempt to record Bells entire life digitally. Foreseeing the coming explosion of digital memory capacity and ubiquitous sensing devices, Bell set out to create a database of everything he did, saw, read, ate, felt—his whole life experience. He fused together a digital version of his past (scanned photos, letters, memorabilia, and so on) with a cuttingedge recording of his present, using sensor-enhanced cameras, GPS, and the latest in software technology. Fascination with this amazing undertaking has been ongoing, with features running everywhere from CBS to Scientific American, The New Yorker to Fast Company. But until now the full implications of what is really possible have not been revealed. Bells experiment is only a foretaste of an incredible new era in which memory will go far beyond the human senses and everything can be remembered. You will have total recall. Total Recall outlines the transformation coming that will affect virtually every aspect of our lives. It describes the near-future with heart monitors woven into clothing, wearable cameras that take photographs constantly and ...
Google Internet Summit 2009: Wireless and Sensor Technology
Google Internet Summit 2009: The State of the Internet May 5, 2009 Wireless and Sensor Technologies Session. Panelists for this session are Craig Partridge, Larry Alder, Sumit Agarwal, Kevin Fall, and Deborah Estrin. On May 5 and 6, 2009, in Mountain View, we brought together Googlers and leaders from academia and the corporate world for a 2-day summit to discuss the state of the global Internet. The goal of the summit was to collect a wide range of knowledge to inform Google's future plans--from product development and market reach to users' expectations and our ability to keep the Internet open yet secure. More than 30 speakers and moderators led discussions around 8 topics: Networks; Wireless and Sensor Technologies; Security; Standards; Applications; Democracy, Law, Policy and Regulation; Search and Cloud Computing; and The Future. Eric Schmidt, who offered some remarks, expressed optimism that the challenges we face with governments' walling off access to the Internet can be overcome technologically by building networks that are transparent, scalable, and open.
ED Stakeholders Forum: College- and Career-Ready Graduates (December 8, 2009)
College- and Career-Ready Graduates This forum featured Michele Cahill, Vice President for National Programs and Program Director for Urban Education, Carnegie Corporation; and Kathy Havens Payne, Senior Director of Education Leadership, State Farm Insurance Companies.