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Wide-faced CEO’s ‘better for their companies’
The Telegraph: Those whose chief executives have fat heads perform better financially than those whose leaders have long faces, according to a study to be published in the journal Psychological Science. Men wider faces tend to have higher testosterone levels, say researchers, making them more aggressive. This could explain the apparently bizarre link between face shape and company performance, they argue. Elaine Wong and colleagues from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee in the US looked at 55 Fortune 500 companies, analysing the structure of their chief executive's faces and financial performance indicators.
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Where Some Earn Enmity, Jobs Won Affection
The New York Times: Steven P. Jobs — domineering, short-tempered and anything but warm and fuzzy — has done something few business people in history have ever accomplished: engender genuine affection. His decision to step down as chief executive of Apple brought people to tears, inspired loving tributes to him on the Web and even had some adoring customers flocking to Apple stores on Thursday to share their sentiments with other fans of Macs, iPhones and iPads. “Through the mist in my eyes, I am having a tough time focusing on the screen of this computer,” wrote Om Malik, the prominent technology blogger.
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Width of CEO’s face can predict the company’s success
Yahoo India: Washington, August 26 (ANI): Want to know how successful a company will be? Well, just look at the width of its CEO's face. A new study has concluded that CEOs with wider faces, like Herb Kelleher, the former CEO of Southwest Airlines, have better-performing companies than CEOs like Dick Fuld, the long-faced final CEO of Lehman Brothers. Elaine M. Wong at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and her colleagues Margaret E. Ormiston of London Business School and Michael P. Haselhuhn of UWM, based their analyses on photos of 55 male CEOs of publicly-traded Fortune 500 organizations.
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Four Loko Is Just Like The Copenhagen Philharmonic
Scientific American: It’s an ordinary afternoon at Copenhagen Central Station. At 2:32pm, a man who appears to be a run-of-the-mill street performer sets up a drum in the center of a large hall. A cellist joins him. A woman approaches with her flute. The melody is sort of recognizable… It sounds sort of like Ravel’s Bolero. Pretty cool jam session, right? Then the clarinet and bassoons and all the rest of the instruments start playing. People pull out their cell phones and record video. Fathers and children take a seat on the tile floor to listen. Mothers with strollers slow down to watch.
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Math anxiety? Study examines nerves by the numbers
msnbc: If the prospect of calculating a tip on a dinner bill with family or friends looking on makes you panic, listen up: Your subpar knack for numbers might not always be the problem, suggests a new study. It may well be that your mind gets in the way of your true ability. Your fears of doing math in a pressure-filled situation cause you to worry and perform poorly. The new report, published in the journal Emotion, looked at the reasons why some students succeed on a math test while others flounder. Scientists measured working memory capacity, a mental scratch pad that temporarily stores and processes information, in 73 college students with low and high levels of math anxiety.
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7 Easy Ways You Can Improve Your Memory Now
USA Weekend: Nearly every day it seems, researchers discover new details about the intricate workings of the human brain. In laboratories across the U.S. and abroad, neuroscientists are pinpointing the specific areas of the brain that are involved in memory, learning and other routine cognitive tasks, and identifying techniques that may help us improve those skills.We culled the most recent research and talked to top experts in the fields of cognition and aging to come up with the latest advice on what you can do to improve your memory, no matter what your age. Does the list of things you find yourself forgetting seem to grow longer by the day?