Creative Innovation (Pt 4): Spontaneity & Frequency
Posted on06 Aug 2012
TagsAlex "Sandy" Pentland, Andrea Anderson, brain, brainstorming, Creative Innovation Series, creativity, drugs, face-to-face interactions, fun, group, Harvard Business Review, innovation, Jonah Lehrer, Scientific American, spontaneous, Steve Jobs, team building, team intelligence, The New Yorker
Comments2
The executive walks through the facility or offices to attend the manager’s meeting and finds many employees having conversations; they are laughing,... Read More
What Consumer Psychology Teaches Us About Problem Solving
Posted on27 Sep 2010
Tagsteach, rewards, rationale, psychology, competitive, cognition, change, buying habits, business, brain, beverages, anticipatory, consumer, How Concepts Affect Consumption, problem solving, price, people, peer pressure, objective, Michael I. Norton, low-cost, keeping up with the Joneses, intuition, Harvard Business Review, goal setting, expectations, emotions, drugs, decisions, Dan Ariely, cost-benefit
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We often anticipate and rationalize people’s decisions using a cost-benefit analysis. This perspective frequently leads to erroneous conclusions and restricts problem-solving capabilities.... Read More