Brian McLogan
When you have a coefficient do this for completing the square
When you have a coefficient of a quadratic and you need to complete the square you have to follow a different process. In this video we will work through what you need to do. ⭐️ What I like to do when completing the square with fractions...
PBS
Do You Have a Money Disorder?
Money is inherently EMOTIONAL, so it makes sense that it gets tied up with our fears and anxieties. Sometimes, they can take over our rational decision making.
The Business Professor
Emotional Intelligence
What is Emotional Intelligence? Emotional intelligence is most often defined as the ability to perceive, use, understand, manage, and handle emotions.
The Business Professor
Egocentrism
What is Egocentrism? Egocentrism is the inability to differentiate between self and other. More specifically, it is the inability to accurately assume or understand any perspective other than one's own. Egocentrism is found across the...
The Business Professor
Carnall's Coping Style Model of Change
What are Carnall's Coping Style model for organizational change? Carnall's Coping Style Model of Change · close-mindedness, · fear of the unknown, or · the fear of not being able to adapt to the new changes.
The Business Professor
Wicked Problems in Entreprneurship
What are Wicked Problems in entrepreneurship? A business problem might be wicked if it includes: Stakeholder disagreements. Complex roots of the problem. A lack of precedent for the problem. Difficulty solving the problem or identifying...
The Business Professor
Structured and Unstructured Problems
What are Structured Problems? What are Unstructured Problems? Unstructured problems are those that do not have a clear definition, solution, or process. They can be challenging and frustrating, but also rewarding and stimulating.
The Business Professor
Sensemaking Theory
What is Sensemaking Theory? Sensemaking or sense-making is the process by which people give meaning to their collective experiences. It has been defined as "the ongoing retrospective development of plausible images that rationalize what...
Curated Video
Appeals to Authority
Philosopher of science and unapologetic mathematical Platonist James Robert Brown, University of Toronto, highlights an impressive array of brilliant mathematical minds who also strongly believed that mathematical truths are “out there”,...
Curated Video
Machine Learning on Raspberry Pi: A Setup Guide
Machine Learning on Raspberry Pi: A Setup Guide
Curated Video
Learning From The Past
Harvard University historian David Armitage discusses the question of how the past can be used to shape today’s policy, describing how policymakers should not only try to avoid making the same mistakes, but also consider worthy roads not...
Curated Video
Does Facial Recognition Work On Face Masks?
Now that we're all wearing masks, we don't have to worry about facial recognition anymore, right? Wrong.
Curated Video
How Does Handwriting Recognition Work? | Scribble for iPadOS 14
So I've been using Scribble on iPadOS 14 for the past week now, and here's my review.
Curated Video
Understanding Vision
Stanford University neuroscientist Kalanit Grill-Spector describes how the act of vision is much more complicated than we might naively assume, as 30% of our brains is dedicated to vision processing.
Curated Video
Measuring Tubby Sound
Caltech physicist and Nobel Laureate David Politzer describes the inherent challenges in trying to explicitly quantify the different sounds of instruments that we somehow detect.
Curated Video
Quantifying Sound
Nobel Laureate David Politzer, Caltech, describes the difficulty in giving objective descriptions of why one banjo sounds different from another, and the different musical styles of individual musicians.
Curated Video
Against "A Few Bad Apples"
Psychologist Philip Zimbardo (Stanford) describes how the official U.S. Government reaction to the horrific abuses at Abu Ghraib prison committed by American soldiers is an all-too-typical denial of the powerful situational effects on...
Curated Video
The Decline Effect
Jonathan Schooler, Professor of Psychological and Brain Sciences at UC Santa Barbara, describes the mysterious "Decline Effect" and speculates on its possible explanation.
Curated Video
Five Senses: Part 2
"Five Senses: Part 2" models how to identify the five senses and how each is used.
Curated Video
Exploring Tone and Mood
“Exploring Tone and Mood” analyzes the relationship between tone and mood and explains how both literary devices create an overall feeling in a story.
Neuro Transmissions
Animal research is still the best option
Animal research is a controversial topic. It's critical for science and medicine, but is it "right" or ethical? New technologies are allowing scientists to conduct experiments in all kinds of new model systems. So that means that...
Curated Video
Recognize that Absolute Value is Always Positive by Adding Two Negative Numbers
Recognize that Absolute Value is Always Positive by Adding Two Negative Numbers recognizes that the absolute value of a number is always positive by adding two negative numbers.
Hip Hughes History
Trump, Taiwan and US Foreign Policy
By taking a phone call with Taiwan, President-Elect Donald Trump caused a minor tremor if Chinese-US Foreign Relations. In this video we'll explain the history of Taiwan and how it has effected the United States relationship with China.