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Who said too much TV isn't good for you? Hosts of the TV Doctor podcast are here to chat about why actually, TV can be the perfect prescription for your wellness. From community, to representation, to escapism, we dive into the many ways in which watching tv might just be what you need. In this episode, Dr. Cassandre Dunbar is joined by media experts Dr. Michele Foss and Ashley Johnson, the dynamic duo behind The TV Doc Podcast. Together, they unpack how television and media shape our sense of identity, belonging, and emotional wellness—especially for Black and mixed-race folks navigating representation and community in an often isolating world. In this episode, we discussed:How TV and media help shape self-perception and racial identityThe emotional and therapeutic impact of nostalgic showsFandom as a powerful form of community and connectionWhy representation on screen matters for our mental healthHow to raise media-savvy, critical-thinking kids in the YouTube ageWhether you're a lifelong Trekkie or someone who finds comfort in rewatching Living Single, this conversation will remind you of the deep impact media can have on our wellbeing.Guest Spotlight: Dr. Michele Foss is what happens when you combine a Professor of Rhetoric and Media in the Department of Communication Studies at Sacramento State University with an unapologetically nerdy pop culture fanatic. From the classes she teaches (ranging from Television Criticism to Media Aesthetics to Communication Theory to Methods of Fandom Studies) to the keynote addresses and invited lectures she delivers, Dr. Foss infuses heart, creativity, inclusivity, and fun into all she does. She uses her three fancy degrees and more than 25 years of boots-on-the-ground experience to make academic concepts accessible and "sticky" for her audiences. She also wears all the hats (creator, producer, editor, writer, and host) for her podcast, The TV Doctor, where she "prescribes" what you should be watching to heal your socio-cultural ailments. She's been recognized by her university for her excellence in teaching, community service, and scholarship/creative activity. Connect with me on socials- join the Be Well,Sis tribe on Instagram, LinkedIn, and YouTube , and subscribe to the newsletter or buy me a coffee!If this episode resonated with you- share with a friend!We're supporting St Jude's- head over to www.stjude.org/bewellsis right now and sign up to be a monthly donor. Together, we can make a real impact.Want to get in touch? Maybe you want to hear from a certain guest or have a recommendation for On My Radar? Get in touch at hello@editaud.io with Be Well Sis in the subject line! Have you're on Not Well, Sis rant to contribute? Click here to send it into the show!Be Well, Sis is hosted by Dr Cassandre Dunbar. The show is edited, mixed and produced by Megan Hayward. Our Production Manager is Kathleen Speckert. Be Well, Sis is an editaudio collaboration. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Applying Communication Theory to remote work can greatly improve the effectiveness of interactions and collaboration within dispersed teams. By implementing clear communication protocols, utilizing video conferencing to capture non-verbal cues, adopting asynchronous tools, regularly reviewing expectations, fostering an inclusive culture, and sharing detailed meeting agendas, organizations can address common challenges and enhance communication clarity. These strategies not only mitigate misunderstandings but also foster a more cohesive and productive remote work environment. Embracing these principles helps ensure that remote teams operate smoothly and achieve their goals efficiently. Behavioral Economics in Marketing Podcast | Understanding how we as humans make decisions is an important part of marketing. Behavioral economics is the study of decision-making and can give keen insight into buyer behavior and help to shape your marketing mix. Marketers can tap into Behavioral Economics to create environments that nudge people towards their products and services, to conduct better market research and analyze their marketing mix. Sandra Thomas-Comenole | Host | Marketing professional with over 15 years of experience leading marketing and sales teams and a rigorously quantitative Master's degree in economics from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Check out her Linkedin profile here: Sandra Thomas-Comenole, Head of Marketing, Travel & Tourism
Where can you be looking back in order to look forward?...Vernon Cronen is a co-creator of the Coordinated Management of Meaning theory of communication. In 1963, Vernon graduated from Ripon College and served for two years as Lieutenant in the US Army, Intelligence branch. After acquiring his Master and PhD from University of Illinois, Urbana, he went on to teach at University of Massachusetts, Amherst from 1970 to 2011. In 1979, Vernon began working with Barnett Pearce to create CMM and has been evolving the theory ever since. He is now part-time faculty at University of North Carolina at wilmington, teaching courses in History, Communication Theory, and CMM. Claire Craddock graduated from University of North Carolina Wilmington in December 2023 with a bachelor's degree in communication studies. She is passionate about creative arts, especially photography, and enjoys taking part in community service projects. Claire deeply values the art of storytelling and our ability to make connections. Claire was introduced to CMM theory by Dr. Cronen in the last year of her undergraduate studies. Since 2023, she has worked with Dr. Cronen to improve the dynamism in CMM theory by extending and further accounting for the aesthetic dimension, as well as the position of the observer.Today, Abbie, Vernon, and Claire discuss the aesthetic dimension of communication, context and reflexivity, and dynamism and disorientation....Take the Survey here!Subscribe to the CosmoParenting Substack!...Stories Lived. Stories Told. is created, produced & hosted by Abbie VanMeter.Stories Lived. Stories Told. is an initiative of the CMM Institute for Personal and Social Evolution....Music for Stories Lived. Stories Told. is created by Rik Spann....Explore all things Stories Lived. Stories Told. here.Explore all things CMM Institute here.
This episode is part of the upcoming online event called Behavior Connect. Behavior Connect is all about moving beyond traditional behavior strategies to foster authentic connections with children. In this episode, I am joined by Jacqueline Jebian Garcia, a neurodivergent Speech-Language Pathologist and Socio-Emotional Coach, as we discuss Polyvagal Theory and its importance in understanding safety and danger through the autonomic nervous system's sympathetic and parasympathetic branches. Jacqueline touches on the roles of different parts of the nervous system and explores how to promote connection and regulation in speech therapy, especially for neurodivergent individuals. The conversation advocates for using declarative language to enhance communication, focusing on interoception and neuroception for better communication and connection. To know more about Behavior Connect, grab your FREE LIVE TICKET now!
Know your audience and tailor the message for them.In high-stakes communication, every word counts. For Jen Psaki, that means knowing who she's talking to — so she knows just what to say.As the former White House Press Secretary and current host of Inside with Jen Psaki on MSNBC, Psaki has discovered that communication isn't about “saying the most words or saying them the loudest,” but about knowing your audience well enough to tailor the message just for them. “You need to think about how you're going to get your audience to listen to you,” she says. “The goal of communicating is to crack the door open so somebody wants to hear more.”In this episode of Think Fast, Talk Smart, Psaki and host Matt Abrahams explore her approach to strategic communication: identifying your audience and using what you know to engage with them and get them to engage with you.Episode Reference Links:Jen Psaki Jen's Book: Say MoreEp.22 Under Pressure How to Communicate Clearly and Timely During Crisis Website / YouTube Ep.155 Can We Be Candid? How to Communicate Clearly and Directly Website / YouTube Connect:Email Questions & Feedback >>> hello@fastersmarter.ioEpisode Transcripts >>> Think Fast Talk Smart WebsiteNewsletter Signup + English Language Learning >>> FasterSmarter.ioThink Fast Talk Smart >>> LinkedIn, Instagram, YouTubeMatt Abrahams >>> LinkedInChapters:(00:00:00) IntroductionHost Matt Abrahams introduces guestJen Psaki, a political analyst and former White House official. (00:01:07) Principles of CommunicationThe importance of doing your homework and active listening.(00:02:08) Skills for Effective ListeningTechniques for focusing and improving listening skills in communication.(00:02:51) Engagement and Lowering BarriersStrategies for making communication more engaging and accessible.(00:03:50) Tailoring CommunicationImportance of audience understanding and adjusting communication style.(00:05:14) Preparation and Practice for ConfidenceThe role of preparation and continuous practice to build confidence.(00:07:07) The Value of FeedbackSeeking feedback and reflecting on communication performances.(00:10:10) Handling Difficult QuestionsTips for managing tough questions and controlling the narrative.(00:12:38) High-Stakes Negotiation Lessons from diplomatic negotiations and finding common ground.(00:15:30) The Final Three QuestionsJen shares a question that Matt should have asked, a communicator she admires, and her ingredients for successful communication.(00:19:48) Conclusion (00:00) - Introduction (02:02) - Principles of Communication (03:03) - Skills for Effective Listening (03:46) - Engagement and Lowering Barriers (04:45) - Tailoring Communication (06:09) - Preparation and Practice for Confidence (08:02) - The Value of Feedback (11:05) - Handling Difficult Questions (13:33) - High-Stakes Negotiation (16:25) - The Final Three Questions (20:43) - Conclusion
Guest Matt Abrahams is a master communicator who helps others overcome their fear of speaking — before live audiences, in small groups, or even one-on-one. His catchphrase, “Think Fast, Talk smart,” describes a mindset that, he says, is key to speaking well. Thinking fast is the ability to recognize and respond to patterns in order to talk smart — becoming more salient, relevant, and concise in the process. Abrahams coaches host Russ Altman on how to talk smart on this episode of Stanford Engineering's The Future of Everything podcast.Episode Reference Links:Matt Abrahams: WebsiteStanford Profile: WebsiteMatt's Podcast: Think Fast, Talk Smart: The PodcastConnect With Us:Episode Transcripts >>> The Future of Everything WebsiteConnect with Russ >>> Threads or Twitter/XConnect with School of Engineering >>> Twitter/XChapters:(00:00:00) IntroductionHost Russ Altman introduces Matt Abrahams, an expert on communication and lecturer at Stanford Graduate School of Business.(00:02:04) The Power of Thinking Fast and Talking SmartMatt explains the concept behind his catchphrase and podcast, "Think Fast, Talk Smart".(00:06:22) Addressing Speaking AnxietyThe prevalence of speaking anxiety, its evolutionary roots, and how it has evolved with modern communication tools.(00:08:46) Impact of AI on CommunicationHow LLMs like ChatGPT can aid in preparation for speaking engagements and assist non-native speakers with communication.(00:11:33) Virtual vs. In-Person CommunicationDifferences between in-person and virtual communication and how individuals can adapt to virtual communication environments.(00:13:59) Handling Difficult QuestionsStrategies for responding to questions when you don't know the answer or can't legally or ethically provide one.(00:17:18) Structuring Effective CommunicationsMethods for structuring communications to ensure clarity and impact.(00:22:10) Cultural Influences on CommunicationThe impact of cultural differences on communication styles and the importance of sensitivity and adaptation.(00:25:11) Reevaluating the Use of Presentation ToolsThe appropriate use of PowerPoint and other visual aids in presentations, with tips for making visuals effective and audience-focused.(00:29:21) Conclusion Connect With Us:Episode Transcripts >>> The Future of Everything WebsiteConnect with Russ >>> Threads or Twitter/XConnect with School of Engineering >>> Twitter/X
David P. Kasperson is co-author of the Wall Street Journal bestselling book, Trust & Inspire: How Truly Great Leaders Unleash Greatness in Others. He has been building high-trust partnerships and innovative solutions for clients of FranklinCovey's Global Trust Practice for more than 15 years, and has been instrumental in developingand teaching the Speed of Trust content. David is a collaborator with Stephen M. R. Covey, managing his speaking business and custom client solutions as the Director of Business Development. An expert on trust, he has served clients via consulting, coaching, program design, and keynote speaking in more than twenty countries.Prior to leading the Speed of Trust speaking business, David managed the Leading at the Speed of Trust Executive Workshop program held in Sundance, Utah, a premier senior-level leadership training, where he worked with hundreds of senior level and influential leaders from across the globe.His client experience includes work with multinational organizations, Fortune 500 companies, franchising, nonprofit, small businesses, educational and governmental agencies, pharmaceutical companies, and financial institutions, including Procter & Gamble, Microsoft, Adventist Health, Kash Group, Lockheed Martin, Nestle, Real Estate Board of New York, Chevron, Yale New Haven Health Center, Astellas, eBay, LinkedIn, Lend Lease Asia, and Utah Valley University.David graduated Summa Cum Laude with a BA & an AA in Communication Theory & Practice from Utah Valley University. He recently served on the Board of Trustees at Mountainville Academy, a “Leader in Me” school that incorporates The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People into its curriculum.David resides with his wife and children in Utah's beautiful Rocky Mountains. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Dr. Reedy talks about communication skills and how “why” we share is more important than the words we use.
Cet épisode a été créé par Thaïs Marques, aka study_and_t sur Instagram. Découvrez le LIVRE Neurosapiens ! Pour apprendre à créer rapidement et à moindre coût son podcast, c'est par ici ! Dans cet épisode j'essaie de vous faire un tour d'horizon des méthodes qui sont proposées pour réduire son “temps d'écran” et dans quels contextes ces méthodes sont recommandées.Recherches et écriture : Thaïs MarquesAnimation & réalisation : Anaïs RouxProduction : Anaïs Roux & Lacmé ProductionInstagram : https://www.instagram.com/neurosapiens.podcast/Pour m'écrire : neurosapiens.podcast@gmail.comAudio : Play-Doh meets Dora - Carmen María and Edu EspinalGood times - Patrick Patrikios.RéférencesLiao, M., & Sundar, S. S. (2022). Sound of silence: Does Muting Notifications Reduce Phone Use? Computers in Human Behavior, 134, 107338. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chb.2022.107338Rahmillah, F. I., Tariq, A., King, M., & Oviedo-Trespalacios, O. (2023). Evaluating the Effectiveness of Apps Designed to Reduce Mobile Phone Use and Prevent Maladaptive Mobile Phone Use: Multimethod Study. Journal of Medical Internet Research, 25, e42541. https://doi.org/10.2196/42541Vanden Abeele, M. M. P., Vandebosch, H., Koster, E. H. W., De Leyn, T., Van Gaeveren, K., De Segovia Vicente, D., Van Bruyssel, S., Van Timmeren, T., De Marez, L., Poels, K., DeSmet, A., De Wever, B., Verbruggen, M., & Baillien, E. (2024). Why, how, when, and for whom does digital disconnection work? A process-based framework of digital disconnection. Communication Theory, 34(1), 3–17. https://doi.org/10.1093/ct/qtad016Wu, L., Sun, S., He, Y., & Jiang, B. (2016). The effect of interventions targeting screen time reduction: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Medicine, 95(27), e4029. https://doi.org/10.1097/MD.0000000000004029
What approach leads to greater creativity in leadership teams? Chris Deaver and Ian Clawson argue that co-creation is the solution for turbulent times, leading through empowerment. They share six principles that enable co-creation: Lead with a Question (Wisdom), Turn Pain into Power (Passion), Make Others the Mission (Compassion), Define the Situation (Action), Create Context (Purpose), and Follow True North (Alignment). Chris and Ian also touch on the individual journey towards embracing co-creation and share real-world examples of the principles. Listen For 00:00 Introduction 03:47 Co-creation in Book Writing 05:08 Concept of 'Brave' in Leadership 06:57 Co-creation in the Workplace 10:34 Implementing Co-creation in Meetings 13:28 Six Principles of Co-creation 18:33 Alignment and Action in Co-creation 22:59 Role of Ego in Leadership and Co-creation 26:11 Creativity in Business and Leadership Meet Chris & Ian Chris Deaver and Ian Clawson are the co-authors of Brave Together – Lead by Design, Spark Creativity, and Shape the Future with the Power of Co-Creation. They are the co-founders of BraveCore, and co-hosts of the Lead with a Question podcast. Chris' Story: Chris has coached C Level Executives & influenced Fortune 500s from the inside out. He has had the dream career at Apple and Disney, working with inspiring teams that shaped iProducts and Star Wars experiences. He's a regular contributor to Fast Company, featured in The Wall Street Journal & Entrepreneur. He's developed landmark studies of the most innovative teams, partnering with Stanford and Harvard professors. Chris continues to advise startups and coach leaders contributing to 10x growth. He earned his MBA and is also continues to be a guest lecturer at the Marriott School at BYU. Ian's Story: Ian Clawson helps leaders build cultures people love. He is a regular contributor to Fast Company who's had work featured in The Wall Street Journal, Forbes, INC, USA Today, Influencive, & Disrupt Magazine. Over the past decade Ian has led culture transformation initiatives in the healthcare industry. Overseeing a multi-million-dollar skilled nursing facility operation in Silicon Valley, CA. He is also co-founder of StoryCircle, a development studio focused on co-creation, world building & original storytelling acting as a lead writer and story architect. Ian earned a degree at BYU-Hawaii in International Cultural Studies where he developed a high interest in World Philosophy and Communication Theory. http://www.bravecore.co/ Book Recommendations Brave Together: Lead by Design, Spark Creativity, and Shape the Future with the Power of Co-Creation by Chris Deaver and Ian Clawson Range by David Epstein Like this? Creating Dream Teams with Mike Zani Nurturing a Team That Flourishes with Dan Pontefract Join Our Community If you want to view our live podcast episodes, hear about new releases, or chat with others who enjoy this podcast join one of our communities below. Join the Facebook Group Join the LinkedIn Group Leave a Review If you liked this conversation, we'd be thrilled if you'd let others know by leaving a review on Apple Podcasts. Here's a quick guide for posting a review. Review on Apple: https://remarkablepodcast.com/itunes Podcast Better! Sign up with Libsyn and get up to 2 months free! Use promo code: RLP
Meet Chuck and Ashley Elliott, a dynamic duo in the realm of relationship guidance, active since 2009. Their journey began with Community Marriage Builders, where they honed their skills in conducting both intimate and large-scale workshops. With certifications in eight diverse Psycho-educational programs, the Elliotts specialize in fostering relational triumphs. Their portfolio includes the creation and instruction of various marriage enrichment programs, and they are passionate advocates for discussing all facets of relationships. Chuck brings a unique perspective as a pastor at Bethel Church in Evansville, Indiana, enriching lives with spiritual insights. Meanwhile, Ashley's expertise as a counselor at Auxilium Psychological Services is complemented by her academic prowess. She notably led the Psychology and Addictions Counseling Program at Oakland City University for over a decade. There, she developed an impressive array of Psychology courses, engaged in groundbreaking research, and even formulated a unique Communication Theory. This theory, a joint effort with Chuck, has been showcased across numerous universities and business platforms nationwide. Outside their professional lives, Chuck, Ashley, and their three sons cherish the outdoors with activities like hiking and mountain biking. And let's not forget those rare but memorable family dance parties that add rhythm to their lives! Related Links: WEBSITE: ChuckandAshley.com INSTAGRAM: @chuckandashleyelliott FACEBOOK: /chuckandashley YOUTUBE: Chuck and Ashley
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Jenn speaks to Taiwanese American Robert (Rob) Tsai, founder of DANCE|PREHAB a physical therapy organization that supports local dance community across all age ranges via rehabilitation strength and conditioning, and injury risk education. From an Asian kid growing up in Taiwan, defying cultural expectations by pursuing a dance career to then becoming an entrepreneur starting a business that integrates his love for dance and healing. Rob shares with us how creating and curating spaces for healing and learning from his own personal and professional experience through dance and more has led him to where he is today. (Recorded on February 16, 2023)About Robert:Originally from Taipei, Taiwan, Rob received his undergraduate degrees in Communication Theory, Dance Performance, and his Doctorate in Physical Therapy from Chapman University In Orange, CA.As a lover of movement, Rob's entrance into dance began with breakin' and hip-hop culture while growing up in Taiwan and eventually led to studying classical modern dance techniques. Rob performed professionally in the Los Angeles commercial industry and taught dance for 8 years prior to pursuing a doctorate in physical therapy. Rob is passionate about creating environments and learning opportunities for all movers to explore their physical capabilities. DANCE|PREHAB supports the local dance community across all age ranges from youth, adolescent, collegiate, and adult movers via physical therapy, strength and conditioning, and injury risk reduction education. Rob also seeks to build up the next generation of physical therapists, and serves as a Kinesiological Motion Analysis Lab Assistant Lecturer at Chapman University's Department of Physical Therapy. Outside of the clinic, Rob enjoys rock climbing, backpacking or hiking, and finding new coffee spots to chill at.Episode Resources: WebsiteIGFBYoutubeRobin Kish
This episode delves into Marshall McLuhan's revolutionary communication theory, discussing how the medium shapes our interactions and influences societal norms and values. McLuhan's perspective encourages critical examination of media and its broader effects, beyond just the content. Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_medium_is_the_message
CHUCK and ASHLEY ELLIOTT, from Evansville, Indiana, joined us to discuss relationships, marriages, her work with the Auxilium Psychological Services, Chuck's mission in serving as a pastor, and their newest release, "I Used to Be: How to Navigate Large and Small Losses in Life and Find Your Path Forward". FROM THEIR WEBSITE: "Chuck and Ashley Elliott have been working with couples since 2009. As marriage educators for Community Marriage Builders, they gained experience developing and leading small and large workshops. The Elliott's are certified in eight different Pscyho-educational programs aimed toward building relational success. Chuck and Ashley have developed and taught multiple marriage programs over the years and love to speak about the topic of relationships. Chuck is also a pastor at Bethel Church in Evansville, IN. Ashley is a counselor with Auxilium Psychological Services. Additionally, she oversaw the Psychology and Addictions Counseling Program at Oakland City University for 11 years. During that time, Ashley developed over 17 Psychology courses, conducted original research with students in her classroom, and created a Communication Theory that she and Chuck have presented at universities and businesses across the United States. Chuck and Ashley have three boys and enjoy hiking, mountain biking, and far too infrequent family dance parties! www.chuckandashley.com
CHUCK and ASHLEY ELLIOTT, from Evansville, Indiana, joined us to discuss relationships, marriages, her work with the Auxilium Psychological Services, Chuck's mission in serving as a pastor, and their newest release, "I Used to Be: How to Navigate Large and Small Losses in Life and Find Your Path Forward". FROM THEIR WEBSITE: "Chuck and Ashley Elliott have been working with couples since 2009. As marriage educators for Community Marriage Builders, they gained experience developing and leading small and large workshops. The Elliott's are certified in eight different Pscyho-educational programs aimed toward building relational success. Chuck and Ashley have developed and taught multiple marriage programs over the years and love to speak about the topic of relationships. Chuck is also a pastor at Bethel Church in Evansville, IN. Ashley is a counselor with Auxilium Psychological Services. Additionally, she oversaw the Psychology and Addictions Counseling Program at Oakland City University for 11 years. During that time, Ashley developed over 17 Psychology courses, conducted original research with students in her classroom, and created a Communication Theory that she and Chuck have presented at universities and businesses across the United States. Chuck and Ashley have three boys and enjoy hiking, mountain biking, and far too infrequent family dance parties! www.chuckandashley.com
What is a quantum bit, and how is it different from a normal bit? What kinds of problems are quantum computers good at solving? And how many dumb jokes can Jonathan shove into this episode?See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Welcome back to another episode! Today, Mak and Ashley sit down and talk about the nature of communication within areas of various sports. They focus on weightlifting, swimming, and running as they have experience in these sports and they tend to emphasize an “ideal body” of individuals, directly or indirectly. Through Ashley's experience of being an elite athlete, who competed in the Olympic swimming trials, to then taking on CrossFit and Mak's experience of running a marathon, they offer a unique perspective that will provide beneficial information. All of the resources used in the podcast are cited below for reference. Thank you for listening and make sure to comment, review, and subscribe to this podcast! Have a great day! Sources: (1) Altheide, D. L., & Pfuhl, E. H. (1980). Self-Accomplishment Through Running. Symbolic Interaction, 3(2), 127–144. https://doi.org/10.1525/si.1980.3.2.127 (2) Anderson, L. M., Reilly, E. E., Gorrell, S., & Anderson, D. A. (2016). Running to win or to be thin? An evaluation of body dissatisfaction and eating disorder symptoms among adult runners. Body image, 17, 43–47. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bodyim.2016.02.003 (3) Bond, K. A., & Batey, J. (2005). Running for Their Lives: A Qualitative Analysis of the Exercise Experience of Female Recreational Runners. Women in Sport & Physical Activity Journal, 14(2), 69-82. https://proxying.lib.ncsu.edu/index.php/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/running-their-lives-qualitative-analysis-exercise/docview/230669301/se-2 (4) Carson, T. L., Tournat, T., Sonneville, K., Zernicke, R. F., & Karvonen-Gutierrez, C. (2021). Cultural and environmental associations with body image, diet and well-being in NCAA DI female distance runners: a qualitative analysis. British Journal of Sports Medicine, 55(8), 433-437. https://doi.org/10.1136/bjsports-2020-102559 (5) Drake, C., & Radford, S. K. (2021). Here is a place for you/know your place: Critiquing “biopedagogy” embedded in images of the female body in fitness advertising. Journal of Consumer Culture, 21(4), 800–826. https://doi-org.prox.lib.ncsu.edu/10.1177/1469540519876009 (6) Hecht, M. L., & Choi, H. (2011). The Communication Theory of Identity as a Framework for Health Message Design (pp. 137–152). (7) Howells, K., & Grogan, S. (2012). Body image and the female swimmer: muscularity but in moderation. Qualitative Research in Sport, Exercise, and Health, 4(1), 98–116. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1080/2159676X.2011.653502 (8) Laynes, I. A., Fagundes, M. G., Barbosa, G. M., de Souza, M. C., & Lombardi Júnior, I. (2022). Exercise dependence, body Dysmorphia, and anxiety in CrossFit practitioners: A cross-sectional study. Journal of Bodywork and Movement Therapies, 32, 77–81. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jbmt.2022.04.013 (9) Moxham, S. (2021). Rejecting the Runner's Body. Fleet Feet. https://www.fleetfeet.com/blog/rejecting-the-runners-body (10) Neilson, S. (2023). Distance runner Lauren Fleshman on the toxicity of elite sports culture. The Seattle Times. https://www.seattletimes.com/entertainment/books/distance-runner-lauren-fleshman-on-the-toxicity-of-elite-sport-culture/?fbclid=IwAR2O2voeU2tQbUYv1ubtP6mqS0O0bY22KlDr1lNpYtMtIWarhP0RcKnIznk&mibextid=Zxz2cZ (11) Ouyang, Y., Wang, K., Zhang, T., Peng, L., Song, G., & Luo, J. (2019). The influence of sports participation on body image, self-efficacy, and self-esteem in college students. Frontiers. Retrieved April 3, 2023, from https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.03039/full (12) Smith, R. A., & Bishop, R. E. (2019). Insights into stigma management communication theory: Considering stigmatization as an interpersonal influence. Journal of applied communication research: JACR, 47(5), 571–590. https://doi.org/10.1080/00909882.2019.1675894 (13) Streno, M. (2022). Why do some athletes struggle with body image? TrueSport. Retrieved April 3, 2023, from https://truesport.org/body-image/athletes-struggle-body-image/ (14) Takano, B. (2023). The body image dilemma for female weightlifters. Breaking Muscle. Retrieved April 3, 2023, from https://breakingmuscle.com/the-body-image-dilemma-for-female-weightlifters/ (15) Walton-Smith, S., & Walton-Smith, S. (2023). Navigating the growing toxicity of gym culture. Varsity Online. Retrieved April 3, 2023, from https://www.varsity.co.uk/sport/22166
This week, Matthew Flisfeder joins Coop and Taylor to discuss his latest book, Algorithmic Desire:Toward a New Structuralist Theory of Social Media. Matthew is Associate Professor of Rhetoric and Communications at The University of Winnipeg, where he teaches courses on Communication Theory, Popular Culture, Critical Theories of Discourse and Ideology, and Critical Studies of Social Media. Matthew's Links: https://matthewflisfeder.com/ https://www.uwinnipeg.ca/cultural-studies/faculty/matthew-flisfeder.html https://twitter.com/MattFlisfeder https://nupress.northwestern.edu/9780810143333/algorithmic-desire/ Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/muhh Twitter: @unconscioushh
Communication is a physical process. It's common sense that sending and receiving intelligible messages takes work…but how much work? The question of the relationship between energy, information, and matter is one of the deepest known to science. There appear to be limits to the rate at which communication between two systems can happen…but the search for a fundamental relationship between speed, error, and energy (among other things) promises insights far deeper than merely whether we can keep making faster internet devices. Strap in (and consider slowing down) for a broad and deep discussion on the bounds within which our entire universe must play…Welcome to COMPLEXITY, the official podcast of the Santa Fe Institute. I'm your host, Michael Garfield, and every other week we'll bring you with us for far-ranging conversations with our worldwide network of rigorous researchers developing new frameworks to explain the deepest mysteries of the universe.This week we speak with SFI Professor David Wolpert and MIT Physics PhD student Farita Tasnim, who have worked together over the last year on pioneering research into the nonlinear dynamics of communication channels. In this episode, we explore the history and ongoing evolution of information theory and coding theory, what the field of stochastic thermodynamics has to do with limits to human knowledge, and the role of noise in collective intelligence.Be sure to check out our extensive show notes with links to all our references at complexity.simplecast.com. If you value our research and communication efforts, please subscribe, rate and review us at Apple Podcasts or Spotify, and consider making a donation — or finding other ways to engage with us, including a handful of open postdoctoral fellowships — at santafe.edu/engage.Lastly, this weekend — October 22nd & 23rd — is the return of our InterPlanetary Festival! Join our YouTube livestream for two full days of panel discussions, keynotes, and bleeding edge multimedia performances focusing space exploration through the lens of complex systems science. The fun begins at 11 A.M. Mountain Time on Saturday and ends 6 P.M. Mountain Time on Sunday. Everything will be recorded and archived at the stream link in case you can't tune in for the live event. Learn more at interplanetaryfest.org…Thank you for listening!Join our Facebook discussion group to meet like minds and talk about each episode.Podcast theme music by Mitch Mignano.Follow us on social media:Twitter • YouTube • Facebook • Instagram • LinkedInReferenced in this episode:Nonlinear thermodynamics of communication channelsby Farita Tasnim and David Wolpert (forthcoming at arXiv.org)Heterogeneity and Efficiency in the Brainby Vijay BalasubramanianNoisy Deductive Reasoning: How Humans Construct Math, and How Math Constructs Universesby David Wolpert & David KinneyStochastic Mathematical Systemsby David Wolpert & David KinneyTwenty-five years of nanoscale thermodynamicsby Chase P. Broedersz & Pierre RoncerayTen Questions about The Hard Limits of Human Intelligenceby David WolpertWhat can we know about that which we cannot even imagine?by David WolpertCommunication consumes 35 times more energy than computation in the human cortex, but both costs are needed to predict synapse numberby William Levy & Victoria CalvertAn exchange of letters on the role of noise in collective intelligenceby Daniel Kahneman, David Krakauer, Olivier Sibony, Cass Sunstein, David WolpertWhen Slower Is Fasterby Carlos Gershenson & Dirk HelbingAdditional Resources:The stochastic thermodynamics of computationby David WolpertElements of Information Theory, Second Edition (textbook)by Thomas Cover & Joy ThomasComputational Complexity: A Modern Approach (textbook)by Sanjeev Arora & Boaz BarakAn Introduction to Kolmogorov Complexity and Its Applications (textbook)by Ming Li & Paul Vitányi
Online Seller Daily Life - Jualan Online - Kehidupan Entrepreneur
Hello guys, karena gw lagi ambil kuliah S2 Master Komunikasi di Binus, jadi gw mau bikin seri podcast tentang #BelajarKomunikasi supaya sembari mengulang materi, kalian juga bisa dengerin dikit2 hahaha Kalau mau dengerin banyak, satu pertemuan tuh 2 jem... Dosennya ngomong ga berenti hehehe Gw bakal rangkum dalam 15-20 menit di podcast ini, thank you buat yang sudah dengerin! Have a nice day!
In this week's episode, Chris speaks with Leah Yaw, Senior Vice President and Chief Strategy Officer for Devereux Advanced Behavioral Health. Leah talks about navigating both passion and purpose. Watch to learn how to best integrate both into your career or your life as a whole! Leah Yaw is lucky and happy to be in a job that combines both her passion and purpose-filled work. She has always been an individual who strives to help people. She wants to help those that are marginalized or don't have the resources to help them grow and succeed. Because of this, she has found fulfillment with her job at Devereux Advanced Behavioral Health. At this organization, she helps people of all ages with mental issues and intellectual disabilities.Her passion became apparent when she told a heartfelt story of the impact her work has on others. She even gave our listeners insight into the importance of managing overzealousness and its connection to burnout. With her job, she leads a meaningful life following her passion while doing work that she finds purpose driven. Leah also explained that one's career does not necessarily need to intertwine both passion and purpose. She shared some advice that she gave her son who is gearing up for college. Leah advises choosing a career you're passionate about, whether that be financial services, teaching, psychology, engineering, whatever it may be. If that job is not necessarily purpose driven she urges individuals to find what they care about in the world. Whether it be animals, environmental protection, gender equality, or quality education, Leah encourages individuals to pursue that purpose-filled work. People can do this by volunteering or even becoming a board member for an organization that supports the cause. Now Leah joins us on Virtuous Heroes Podcast to talk with us. Her advice will help leaders and young professionals find the right path filled with both passion and purpose. More about our guest:As Senior Vice President and Chief Strategy Officer, Leah Yaw is responsible for developing, communicating, executing and sustaining strategic initiatives. These initiatives are across the organization that are aligned with Devereux's mission and core values. In Yaw's External Affairs role, she manages all fundraising, crisis management, and public policy and advocacy. Yaw joined Devereux in 2009 in the role of Vice President of Development and Communications. In 2012, she was promoted to Senior Vice President of External Affairs. In 2018, she was promoted to her current position.Prior to joining Devereux, Yaw was the Vice President of Strategic Advancement for KidsPeace. KidsPeace is a national nonprofit organization serving children with behavioral health needs. She began her career serving the public relations and crisis communications needs of both for- and nonprofit corporations. Yaw holds a Bachelor of Arts in English Writing and Public Policy, Summa Cum Laude, from the Honors College of the University of Pittsburgh. She also holds a Master of Science in Communication Theory, Summa Cum Laude, from the Shippensburg University of Pennsylvania. She serves on the board of trustees for organizations such as Devereux Community Behavioral Health of Okeechobee and Treasure Coast. Others include the Advancement Committee for The Swain School and the Centennial Planning Committee for Vision 2020. Yaw is also a trustee for the Public Policy Advisory Committee for the Alliance for Strong Families and Communities. https://www.linkedin.com/in/leah-s-yaw-a7290817/#experience
Welcome to our newest show at Impact Radio USA, "INTERVIEWS and MORE", the show that features past interviews from our guests on "Dr. Paul's Family Talk" radio show. In addition to continuing to promote our guests, this show also gives our listeners another opportunity to hear the great information that our guests have provided. As for the "More", we will cover everything from food, to cars, to Bible verses, to music, and so much "MORE"! NEW SHOWS ARE DROPPED EACH MONDAY AT 10:00 AM ET. On today's segment, we will talk to Chuck and Ashley Elliott: CHUCK and ASHLEY ELLIOTT, from Evansville, Indiana, joined us to discuss relationships, marriages, and her work with the Psychology & Addictions program at OCU. In addition to Chuck serving as a pastor, they offer online programs to help people through grief and relationship challenges at home and work. FROM THEIR WEBSITE: "Chuck and Ashley Elliott have been working with couples since 2009. As marriage educators for Community Marriage Builders, they gained experience developing and leading small and large workshops. The Elliott's are certified in eight different Pscyho-educational programs aimed toward building relational success. Chuck and Ashley have developed and taught multiple marriage programs over the years and love to speak about the topic of relationships. Chuck is also a pastor at Bethel Church in Evansville, IN. Ashley is a counselor with Auxilium Psychological Services. Additionally, she oversaw the Psychology and Addictions Counseling Program at Oakland City University for 11 years. During that time, Ashley developed over 17 Psychology courses, conducted original research with students in her classroom, and created a Communication Theory that she and Chuck have presented at universities and businesses across the United States. Chuck and Ashley have three boys and enjoy hiking, mountain biking, and far too infrequent family dance parties! www.chuckandashley.com
Elizabeth A. Suter (Ph.D., University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) is a Professor in the Department of Communication Studies and Affiliated Faculty in the Gender and Women's Studies Program at the University of Denver. She identifies as a feminist, social-justice-oriented interpersonal and family communication scholar. She views the family as a politicized institution animated by the broader discursive, material, and political environment. Primary contexts of study include transracial, international adoption and lesbian co-motherhood. Recently she developed the Critical Interpersonal and Family Communication (CIFC) heuristic, calling for the centering of power, praxis, and reflexivity in contemporary studies of relationships and families. This work appears in the the Journal of Family Communication, Communication Monographs, and Communication Theory. She lives with her partner and two daughters in Denver, Colorado. Email us: tough.love.stories@gmail.com Find us on Instagram @tough.love.podcast
INTRODUCTION Do you want to be smarter than single-use disposables? What impacts could big organizations' canteens expect if they switch to reusables? With my guest, Rich Grousset from Re:Dish, we could have talked about it for days! This episode is an accelerated overview of how a take-back system for reusable food containers can reshape consumer behavior at scale! We covered the cyclic ‘deliver-collect-clean' business model of Re:Dish, including their optimization rate, their local choices, their materials' properties, and the value of their impactful ‘scope 3' metrics.You will also discover a lot of behind the scene strategies, like their motivational communication, their sustainable commitment at every level of their logistic, and some of their partnerships. And if you are interested in reuse, I invite you to listen to episodes 6, 8, 9, 10, and 12 with guests from other parts of the world using various materials in different kinds of contexts. And of course, to episode 17 where I shared 3 key benefits of reusable packaging. RESOURCES MENTIONED AND RECOMMENDED IN THIS EPISODEThe Impact Report 2021 of Just Salad (https://justsalad.com/), published in April 2022: https://s3.amazonaws.com/media.justsalad.com/assets/Just-Salad-2021-Annual-Impact-Report.pdf, p.29: «The LCA showed that on average, our reusable MyBowl results in lower global warming (greenhouse gas emissions) and water consumption impacts than disposable fiber bowls after just two uses.»The Understanding Packaging Scorecard, led by the Single Use Material Decelerator (SUM'D) and hosted by the Food Packaging Forum: https://upscorecard.org/#launch-scorecardThe burning question came from episode #20: How to grow your compostable packaging? Explore the wonder of mycelium! with Meghan Olson of Ecovative DesignThe NSF certification: https://www.nsf.org/Colienne mentioned the 'Switching to Reusable Products in Large Foodservice Operations' panel moderated by Rich on May 2 during the Circular City Week 2022 in New York. Watch the recording here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_wJ1GB5iwaYaNYbag is a partner of ReDish that takes plastic waste and transforms it into beautiful reusable tote bags: https://anybag.com/If you are interested in motivations and shifting behavior, Colienne recommended listening toEpisode #15: Segmenting 7 motivations to better reach your market with Lindsey Boyle of Circular CitizenEpisode #18: Sustainable packaging through the lens of the SHIFT marketing framework _ Part ½ and Episode #19: Sustainable packaging through the lens of the SHIFT marketing framework _ Part 2/2 with Katherine White of UBC Sauder School of Business & Rosemary Cooper of Share Reuse Repair InitiativeWe talked about the ReDish experience at the ‘Pollinator Picnic' organized by Madison Square Park Conservancy in New York on May 21, 2022: https://madisonsquarepark.org/community/calendar/event/pollinator-picnic/The book that Rich recommended: «How to Save the World: How to Make Changing The World The Greatest Game We've Ever Played», by Katie Patrick, 2019. WHERE TO FIND RE:DISH AND RICHThe website of Re:Dish: https://www.redish.com/Their social media:https://www.linkedin.com/company/redishco/https://www.facebook.com/ReDishCompanyhttps://www.instagram.com/redish_co/The email of Rich Grousset: rgrousset@redish.comThe LinkedIn profile of Rich Grousset: https://www.linkedin.com/in/richgrousset/ ABOUT RICH GROUSSET FROM RE:DISHRich Grousset is a sustainability expert and social entrepreneur committed to helping organizations transition from single-use foodservice products to reusable alternatives. He is currently the head of sustainability at Re:Dish, an NYC-based company providing reusable foodservice packaging as a service to organizations with large dining operations. Before joining Re:Dish, Rich had launched several reusable-to-go container programs in university and workplace cafeterias and worked on various reuse-related projects as an independent consultant. Rich earned an MBA and MS in Environmental Policy from the University of Michigan, an MA in Survey Research Methods from UConn, a BS in Communication Theory from Cornell University, and is a GBCI certified TRUE Zero Waste Advisor. PODCAST MUSICSpecial thanks to Joachim Regout who made the jingle. Have a look at his work here. I am happy to bring a sample of our strong bonds on these sound waves. Since I was a child, he made me discover a wide range of music of all kinds. I am also delighted he is a nature lover and shares the Look4Loops 'out of the box philosophy'. He is an inspiring source of creativity for me.
CHUCK and ASHLEY ELLIOTT, from Evansville, Indiana, joined us to discuss relationships, marriages, and her work with the Psychology & Addictions program at OCU. In addition to Chuck serving as a pastor, they offer online programs to help people through grief and relationship challenges at home and work. FROM THEIR WEBSITE: "Chuck and Ashley Elliott have been working with couples since 2009. As marriage educators for Community Marriage Builders, they gained experience developing and leading small and large workshops. The Elliott's are certified in eight different Pscyho-educational programs aimed toward building relational success. Chuck and Ashley have developed and taught multiple marriage programs over the years and love to speak about the topic of relationships. Chuck is also a pastor at Bethel Church in Evansville, IN. Ashley is a counselor with Auxilium Psychological Services. Additionally, she oversaw the Psychology and Addictions Counseling Program at Oakland City University for 11 years. During that time, Ashley developed over 17 Psychology courses, conducted original research with students in her classroom, and created a Communication Theory that she and Chuck have presented at universities and businesses across the United States. Chuck and Ashley have three boys and enjoy hiking, mountain biking, and far too infrequent family dance parties! www.chuckandashley.com
CHUCK and ASHLEY ELLIOTT, from Evansville, Indiana, joined us to discuss relationships, marriages, and her work with the Psychology & Addictions program at OCU. In addition to Chuck serving as a pastor, they offer online programs to help people through grief and relationship challenges at home and work. FROM THEIR WEBSITE: "Chuck and Ashley Elliott have been working with couples since 2009. As marriage educators for Community Marriage Builders, they gained experience developing and leading small and large workshops. The Elliott's are certified in eight different Pscyho-educational programs aimed toward building relational success. Chuck and Ashley have developed and taught multiple marriage programs over the years and love to speak about the topic of relationships. Chuck is also a pastor at Bethel Church in Evansville, IN. Ashley is a counselor with Auxilium Psychological Services. Additionally, she oversaw the Psychology and Addictions Counseling Program at Oakland City University for 11 years. During that time, Ashley developed over 17 Psychology courses, conducted original research with students in her classroom, and created a Communication Theory that she and Chuck have presented at universities and businesses across the United States. Chuck and Ashley have three boys and enjoy hiking, mountain biking, and far too infrequent family dance parties! www.chuckandashley.com
Dogs Are Smarter Than People: Writing Life, Marriage and Motivation
Last week on WRITE BETTER NOW, we talked about fear for our characters as we write, and not all of you are writers, but I bet a lot of you are characters. Sorry! We couldn't help teasing you there. Anyway, FEAR is great when it comes to writing novels and short stories and getting our characters to do things proactively on the page. But in real life? Eh . . . It can be a problem. A lot of us use fear to motivate us to do things. Sometimes we do this consciously. Sometimes we do this subconsciously. But it's basically the act of doing things because we don't want an outcome that we're afraid of. Like what? We go to work because we're afraid of losing our house to bankruptcy. We go on a diet because we're afraid of people's scorn if we're at our maximum density. We are kind to our spouse when they are being a putz because we're afraid of being alone. And all those things? They are stressful. It stresses you out if you're always doing things because you're afraid. And it also stresses you out if you're always not doing things because you're afraid. Fear may keep you employed, fit, and in a relationship (albeit a potentially toxic one), but it's not super helpful if you're trying to not be anxious and stressed. So, how do you motivate yourself instead? One cool way is protection motivation theory. What's that? According to CommunicationTheory.org, “The theory therefore says that in order for an individual to adopt a health behavior, they need to believe that there is a severe threat that is likely to occur and that by adopting a health behavior, they can effectively reduce the threat. The individual should also be convinced that he is capable of engaging in the behavior which should not cost him a lot.” Wait, doesn't that sound like some fear-based motivation? A bit. But a big part of it is that there is both a threat appraisal and a coping appraisal. As the Warbleton Council writes 1. Threat assessmentFear of illness or injury predisposes to act (for example, when you are smoking and coughing a lot).In turn, this element is made up of the perception of severity (the possible harm to be suffered) and susceptibility (the level of risk the person is at), in addition to the intrinsic benefits of risky behavior.2. Assessment of coping behaviorIt is the probability of success perceived by the person, that is, the perception they have that their response will be effective in reducing the threat, in addition to the perception of self-efficacy (the person will be able to adopt preventive measures).These variables will provide in the person a perspective on the costs and benefits of performing the behavior. When you appraise the threat and coping mechanisms, you start to figure out if you should make change and what amount of changes you should undergo. The Communication Theory article breaks all this down pretty brilliantly, so you should check it out, but it's about intention and how you keep yourself safe and change your behavior when you perceive threats. There's a fascinating article about this theory and food purchasing behavior during COVID-19 and our shopping habits. DOG TIP FOR LIFE Just go for it, damn it. No fear. LINK WE MENTION IN RANDOM THOUGHTS https://www.ladbible.com/community/bride-slammed-for-entering-wedding-walking-groom-on-a-leash-20220423 SHOUT OUT! The music we've clipped and shortened in this podcast is awesome and is made available through the Creative Commons License. Here's a link to that and the artist's website. Who is this artist and what is this song? It's “Summer Spliff” by Broke For Free. AND we are transitioning to a new writer podcast called WRITE BETTER NOW! You'll be able to check it out here starting in 2022! We have a podcast, LOVING THE STRANGE, which we stream live on Carrie's Facebook and Twitter and LinkedIn on Fridays. Her Facebook and Twitter handles are all carriejonesbooks or carriejonesbook. Carrie is reading one of her poems every week on CARRIE DOES POEMS. And there you go! Whew! That's a lot! Here's the link. Write Better Now - Writing Tips podcast for authors and writers loving the strange the podcast about embracing the weird Carrie Does Poems
Josh Shepperd joins Money on the Left to discuss the research and activism that hastened the rise of public media in the United States. Assistant Professor of media studies at the University of Colorado-Boulder, Shepperd shows how public-interest broadcasting platforms like NPR and PBS exist in the U.S. today in large part as a consequence of hard-fought battles by committed scholars and advocates throughout the inter- and post-war periods. In particular, Shepperd traces the untold aftermath of the Communications Act of 1934 which, in addition to creating the Federal Communications Commission, gave overwhelming legal support to private for-profit networks, while stripping radio licenses from public and educational broadcasters committed to serving the common good. Deepening this narrative, Shepperd draws special attention to the Princeton Radio Research Project, spearheaded by noted sociologist and communication studies scholar Paul Lazarsfeld. Through the Project, Lazarsfeld developed influential quantitative research methods that fundamentally shaped the discipline of communication studies. Fascinatingly, however, Lazarsfeld hired then-immigré critical theorist Theodor Adorno to assist in the research program. As Shepperd tells it, Lazardfeld welcomed and even incorporated the critical theorist's incisive contributions into the Project. Yet, Adorno ultimately repudiated the Project's efforts to build a robust U.S. public radio system, unfortunately divorcing the developing tradition of Critical Theory from the domain of public media research and advocacy. Fast-forwarding to the present, we ask Shepperd about his argument that contemporary humanities research ought to be politically constructive. We then conclude by exploring his important archival work for the Radio Preservation Task Force at the Library of Congress.See here for Shepperd's article, “Theodor Adorno, Paul Lazarsfeld, and the Public Interest Mandate of Early Communications Research, 1935–1941,” published by the journal Communication Theory in August 2021.Visit our Patreon page here: https://www.patreon.com/MoLsuperstructureMusic by Nahneen Kula: www.nahneenkula.com
What is Coordinated Management of Meaning?What does it mean to be "persons-in-conversation"?...In this first episode, Abbie gives an overview and introduction to the Coordinated Management of Meaning (CMM) Communication Theory. Abbie explores the way stories coexist in CMM and walks through the 4 central claims of the theory...Stories Lived. Stories Told. is created, produced & hosted by Abbie VanMeter.Stories Lived. Stories Told. is an initiative of the CMM Institute for Personal and Social Evolution....Music for Stories Lived. Stories Told. is created by Liz Hukkleberg....Explore all things Stories Lived. Stories Told.Email me! storieslived.storiestold@gmail.comFollow me on Instagram.Subscribe on YouTube.Check out my website.Learn more about the CMM Institute.Learn more about CMM.Learn more about Cosmopolis 2045.Learn more about CosmoKidz.Learn more about the CosmoTeenz Fellows' work on Instagram.
Host Casandra Grundstrom is joined by special guest Assistant Professor Lauren Waardenburg. She is an assistant professor at IESEG School of Management in Lille, France. Her main research interests are related to the role of technology for occupational emergence and change, the reconfiguration of work and organizing due to intelligent technologies, and the duality of the physical and the digital. She has a specific interest in using ethnography as a research method for studying technology in practice.In this episode, we hear about Lauren's extreme AI work environment cases which offers a fascinating look at the Dutch police force and KLM, we review different perspectives on AI and work (including the cliché of AI replacing us in our jobs), the methodological aspects of using ethnography (as Lauren does) along with managing the challenges of accessing captivating cases, finally we consider the positioning of IS to study AI as a tool. Lucky us!References:Leonardi, Paul M., Crossing the Implementation Line: The Mutual Constitution of Technology and Organizing Across Development and Use Activities (January 28, 2009). Communication Theory, Vol. 19, No. 3, pp. 277-310, 2009 , Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1334082Waardenburg, L., Huysman, M., & Agterberg, M. (2021). Managing AI Wisely: From Development to Organizational Change in Practice. Edward Elgar Publishing. Waardenburg, L., Huysman, M., & Sergeeva, A. V. (2021). In the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is king: Knowledge brokerage in the age of learning algorithms. Organization Science. Waardenburg, L., Sergeeva, A., & Huysman, M. (2018, December). Hotspots and blind spots. In Working Conference on Information Systems and Organizations (pp. 96-109). Springer, Cham. Waardenburg, L., Sergeeva, A., & Huysman, M. (2018). Digitizing crime: How the use of predictive policing influences police work practices. In 34th European Group for Organizational Studies (EGOS) Colloquium: Surprise in and around Organizations: Journeys to the Unexpected. Willcocks, L. (2020). Robo-Apocalypse cancelled? Reframing the automation and future of work debate. Journal of Information Technology, 35(4), 286-302. Other References:Trondheim Bus: https://beta.atb.no/pilotprosjekter/europas-forste-selvkjorende-buss-pa-bestilling
The United States is obsessed with policing drugs and those who use them, yet the most deadly, well-studied drug in existence, nicotine, is a regulated product, legal to buy once a consumer is 21 years old. According to the WHO, tobacco, when used properly, will kill half of all people who don't stop using it. And because cigarettes are so obviously dangerous yet still widely distributed and glamorized, they hold a clue to our human condition. The story of cigarettes is the story of media.In this episode I discuss the history of tobacco advertising and what that can teach us about the history of drugs. I also discuss the roots of the Communication field of study, the power of propaganda, and methods for influencing human behavior (Freud & Bernays). Check out Mitch Zeller's Ted Talk for more about current statistics and proposed solutions to the tobacco death problem. To get an idea of what Zeller's "non-addictive cigarette" would look like, check out JAMA's "Less Addictive Cigarettes" (2019). For a great summary of Big Tobacco's history, from film to feminism, check out "The Tobacco Conspiracy" on YouTube. And for the history of Communication as a contemporary field of study, see Stephen Hartnett's piece, "Communication, Social Justice and Joyful Commitment." In the 1960s, Phillip-Morris (Marlboro) began putting ammonia into their cigarettes, allowing tobacco to be freebased and thereby reducing the quantity one needed to smoke to achieve desired effects (less tobacco required to deliver a dose of nicotine). Around the same time, manufacturers introduced the so-called "Light Cigarette," which you can read about in Anne Harding's article. To watch Dick Trickle smoke as he drives around the race track, check out YouTube.
There are some people you just want to hang around. Tai Irwin is one of them. Funny, thoughtful, curious and always respectful, he has been a fixture in Boston radio, and the voice over community. He keeps a hand in broadcasting with a musical retrospective program on WUMB-FM, while he is a full-time Job Placement specialist at Boston's Pine Street Inn homeless shelter. Check out the shelter's breadth of services, and discover ways to help on their website.Tai and I get silly, talk audio editing injuries, storytelling, the joy of learning and if Pete Townsend was really ever in The Who. Connect with Tai here.Tai Irwin has been in the business of communications since he voiced a line in a motorcycle spot at 16. Taken under wing by WLIR radio on Long Island, this led eventually to the role of Program Director at WAER, Syracuse University's radio station and a degree from the Newhouse School of Communications in 1981. Being in the right place at the right time meant meeting U2 as they established a firm foothold in North America, along with countless other bands. Hired by WQBKam and fm in Albany NY, he was able to wear two hats as dj on the fm side, and talk show host on the am.In 1985 WFNX hired him after a year of courting, and this led to a ten-year stint as “Morning Guy Tai.” This was also the year he began work as an independent voice/over artist, doing commercial and industrial work on radio, tv and internet platforms.Tai took his unique style, smarts and curiosity to Talk Radio at WRKO as and 96.9FM, and back to music at WROR-FM. He's freelanced across the country with work in Los Angeles, Seattle, and Sirius Satellite.In 2006 he joined the Audio Engineering staff at The New England Institute of Art in Brookline, MA in the role of Senior Career Advisor. During his 11 years in this position he earned a master's degree in Adult Education, and began teaching college- level Communication Theory, American Popular Music, and First Amendment.In 2018 he became part of the Workforce Development team at Pine Street Inn.
Journalisten zijn er in veel soorten en maten. Van de landelijk bekende columnist tot de hyper lokale verslaggever. In deze aflevering gaan Erwin van 't Hof en Sanne Poot het gesprek aan over die verschillen en hoe die het freelanceleven beïnvloeden. Te gast is Sheila Sitalsing, freelance journalist en onder meer columnist voor De Volkskrant. Het artikel dat ten grondslag ligt aan deze aflevering is The Space of Journalistic Work: A theoretical Model door Henrik Örnebring, Michael Karlsson, Karin Fast, & Johan Lindell. Het artikel verscheen in 2018 in Communication Theory. In het artikel wordt aan de hand van Field Theory van Pierre Bourdieu een model voorgesteld dat het mogelijk maakt om het gesprek aan te gaan over verschillen tussen journalisten. Sanne Poot op Twitter: https://twitter.com/SannePoot (https://twitter.com/SannePoot) Erwin van 't Hof op LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/erwin-van-t-hof-0b27443a (www.linkedin.com/in/erwin-van-t-hof-0b27443a) Reageren? Mail naar contact@erwinvanthof.nl of tweet met #freelanceleven. #freelanceleven is een podcast voor Villamedia en wordt mede mogelijk gemaakt door het Lira Steunfonds Reprorecht. Erwin van 't Hofs onderzoek aan de Universiteit van Amsterdam wordt mede mogelijk gemaakt door Stichting Democratie en Media en het Stimuleringsfonds voor de Journalistiek. Het logo is gemaakt door Monica Schokkenbroek.
Dr. Chris Segrin is a behavioral scientist and Department Head for Communication at the University of Arizona, specializing in interpersonal relationships and mental health. He is the author of Interpersonal Processes in Psychological Problems and Family Communication. Dr. Segrin has also had research published in Human Communication Research, Communication Monographs and the Journal of Abnormal Psychology, to name a few. He has spent over two decades focusing on interpersonal communication and conducts research studies on how social skill deficits can make people more vulnerable to depression. Dr. Segrin served as the editor of the journal Communication Theory from 2003 to 2005, and was appointmented as an Adjunct Professor in the departments of Psychology, Family Studies, and Statistics at the University of Arizona. In today's episode, host Shay Beider welcomes Dr. Segrin to talk about the importance of high quality interpersonal relationships and the detrimental effects of negative coping mechanisms. He shares his personal story on the loss of multiple family members, and how he was able to learn that good things can blossom from loss. Dr. Segrin expands on the importance of cohesion in family systems and the current state of distress families are under due to technology and everyday distractions. He shares with Shay the importance of finding an individual purpose to create a life worth living. Transcripts for this episode are available at: https://www.integrativetouch.org/conversations-on-healing Show Notes: Buy Interpersonal Processes in Psychological Problems and Family Communication Read his publications in Human Communication Research His research on conflict styles and marital satisfaction here Publications in Journal of Abnormal Psychology Learn about Communication Theory here This podcast was created by Integrative Touch for Kids (ITK). ITK is working to change the way people experience healthcare. ITK supports families whose children have any type of special health or medical need. This includes kids with cancers, genetic conditions, autism, cerebral palsy, traumatic stress, and other serious health issues. We have pioneered a new therapy called Integrative Touch™ and reach thousands of people each year in the hospital and community settings. We engage communities in support of families struggling with special medical needs and offer unique Telehealth programs to families and healthcare providers during this challenging time. Thanks to the incredible support of our volunteers and contributors, individuals are able to receive our healing services at little or no cost.
In this episode, Kendall Monroe and Carson Cox will be interviewing Dr. Zengaro and discussing her research in the mental health of college athletes. Dr. Zengaro's background: "My research interests are in sport-health communication, with a focus on the stigma of mental health in college sports. For my dissertation, I conducted a qualitative study, and I researched how athlete identity contributes to the stigma of mental health communication in college sports through a toughness narrative based on the Communication Theory of Identity. This toughness narrative creates the idealized image of an athlete and the “no pain no gain” mentality that is very common in sports, which makes it harder for athletes to communicate mental health issues for fear of appearing weak to their coaches and teammates. I am currently looking at how to publish this data to improve mental health literacy and communication for student-athletes. Prior research I have done includes looking at factors that affect disclosure of health issues and fan identity and social media use in sports."
La moda como espejo de la sociedad nos refleja lo que ocurre en un momento social específico. Muchas personas verán las influencias más inocentes, pero la moda refleja también la moralidad, el escándalo y sobre todo el sexo que tanto ha definido el lugar social de las mujeres desde tiempos inmemoriales. Lo han llamado el oficio más antiguo del mundo y todavía resulta un tema tabú aunque el arte y películas desde Mujer bonita hasta American Gigolo lo hayan visibilizado un poco más. Desde Holly Golightly hasta Olympia, el valor estético del trabajo sexual ha sido una parte importante de las tendencias de moda para escandalizar, estilizar y desafortunadamente nunca para discutir de fondo las consecuencias que el sexo como labor han tenido sobre nuestra colectividad. Referencias: Blake Edwards, dir. Diamantes para el desayuno [Breakfast at Tiffany's]. 1961. Cesare Vecellio. De gli habiti antichi et moderni di diversi parti del mondo. Venecia: Damiano Zenaro, 1590. Clare Haru Crowston. Credit, Fashion, Sex: Economies of Regard in Old Regime France. Durham: Duke University Press, 2013. Corte Suprema de Justicia de Colombia. Sentencia de 26 de Octubre de 2006. Magistrado Ponente: Alvaro Orlando Perez Pinzón. Proceso número: 25743. Denis Bruna (curaduría), “Tenue correcte exigée. Quand le vêtement fait scandale”, MAD París, 1 de diciembre de 2016 al 23 de abril de 2017, https://madparis.fr/tenue-correcte-exigee-quand-le-vetement-fait-scandale-1511. Elizabeth Alice Clement. Love for Sale: Courting, Treating, and Prostitution in New York City, 1900–1945. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2006. Felipe Guamán Poma de Ayala. El primer nueva crónica y buen gobierno. 1615/1616. http://www.kb.dk/permalink/2006/poma/1125/en/text/?open=idp657200. Garry Marshall. Mujer bonita [Pretty Woman]. 1990. Buena Vista Pictures. Itai Doron. “Male prostitution and fashion: Dressed to thrill”, en The Routledge Handbook of Male Sex Work, Culture, and Society, editado por John Geoffrey Scott, Christian Grov y Victor Minichiello, 61–82. Londres: Routledge, 2021. Kathleen M. Brown. Foul Bodies: Cleanliness in Early America. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2009. Martina Barroeta Zalaquett: https://www.instagram.com/fashionerd.cl/. Paul Schrader. American Gigolo. 1980. Paramount. Roland Barthes, Mark Gottdiener, Karin Boklund-Lagopoulou y Alexandros Ph Lagopoulos. “Semiotics”. En A First Look at Communication Theory, editado por Em Griffin. 1972. Yale Daily News. “Anti-Fashion: Patriarchy necessitates prostitution necessitates fashion”, 20 de abril de 2007, https://yaledailynews.com/blog/2007/04/20/anti-fashion-patriarchy-necessitates-prostitution-necessitates-fashion/. Encuéntranos en: http://culturasdemoda.com/salon-de-moda/ @moda2_0 @culturasdemoda #SalonDeModa Agradecemos a Fair Cardinals (@faircardinals) por la música, a Jhon Jairo Varela Rodríguez por el diseño gráfico y a Maca Rubio por la edición del audio.
Rendering Unconscious welcomes Dr. Matthew Flisfeder to the podcast! Dr. Matthew Flisfeder is an Associate Professor of Rhetoric and Communications at The University of Winnipeg, where he teaches courses on Communication Theory, Popular Culture, Critical Theories of Discourse and Ideology, and Critical Studies of Social Media. He also teaches Cultural Theory in the MA program in Cultural Studies, and supervises Directed Readings and Special Studies courses on cultural/critical theory, media and communication theory, film and popular culture, social media, videogames, and cyberpunk culture. He is a Faculty Researcher affiliated with the Centre for Research in Cultural Studies (CRiCS) at The University of Winnipeg. He is an Editorial Board member for the journals Rethinking Marxism and TOPIA: Canadian Journal of Cultural Studies. https://matthewflisfeder.com His new book is Algorithmic Desire: Toward a New Structuralist Theory of Social Media (Northwestern UP 2021): https://matthewflisfeder.com/algorithmic-desire-toward-a-new-structuralist-theory-of-social-media/ Previous books include Postmodern Theory and Blade Runner (Bloomsbury 2017) and The Symbolic, The Sublime, and Slavoj Žižek's Theory of Film (Palgrave 2012). I am also the co-editor of Žižek and Media Studies: A Reader (Palgrave Macmillan 2014). https://matthewflisfeder.com Follow him at Twitter: https://twitter.com/MattFlisfeder This episode also available at YouTube: https://youtu.be/8O5Ie5uKBqQ Rendering Unconscious Podcast is hosted by psychoanalyst Dr. Vanessa Sinclair, who interviews psychoanalysts, psychologists, scholars, creative arts therapists, writers, poets, philosophers, artists & other intellectuals about their process, work, world events, the current state of mental health care, politics, culture, the arts & more. http://www.renderingunconscious.org Support the podcast at Patreon. Your support is greatly appreciated! https://www.patreon.com/vanessa23carl Rendering Unconscious Podcast can be found at your favorite podcasting platforms, including: Spotify / iTunes / Soundcloud / Podbean: http://www.renderingunconscious.org/about/ Dr. Sinclair is the author of The Pathways of the Heart (Trapart Books, 2021), Scansion in Psychoanalysis and Art: the Cut in Creation (Routledge, 2020) and Switching Mirrors (Trapart Books, 2016). Dr. Sinclair is the editor of Rendering Unconscious: Psychoanalytic Perspectives, Politics & Poetry (Trapart Books, 2019) Outsider Inpatient: Reflections on Art as Therapy (Trapart Books, 2021) with Dr. Elisabeth Punzi, On Psychoanalysis and Violence: Contemporary Lacanian Perspectives (Routledge, 2018) co-edited with Dr. Manya Steinkoler, and The Fenris Wolf, vol 9 (Trapart, 2017) co-edited with Carl Abrahamsson. http://www.drvanessasinclair.net Visit the main website for more information and links to everything: http://www.renderingunconscious.org Rendering Unconscious: Psychoanalytic Perspectives, Politics & Poetry (Trapart 2019): https://store.trapart.net/details/00000 The song at the end of the episode is “Seems like an eternity” from the album "Conceive ourselves" by Vanessa Sinclair and Pete Murphy from Highbrow Lowlife. https://vanessasinclairpetemurphy.bandcamp.com/album/this-is-voyeurism Many thanks to Carl Abrahamsson, who created the intro and outro music for Rendering Unconscious podcast. https://www.carlabrahamsson.com Image: Algorithmic Desire: Toward a New Structuralist Theory of Social Media (Northwestern University Press, 2021)
Hey Journal! How about instead of a Hot Girl Summer you will have a Hot Girl Life! Set a goal to be your best Hot Girl Self forever! Improve your self-image, mindset, and learn how to set healthy boundaries. Be the hot girl you deserve to be! The Symbolic Interactionism theory comes from the book A First Look at Communication Theory (8th), Griffin, E. (2012) Insta:@janesjournalpodcast
Beyond Introspection: A Podcast About Neurodivergence & Identity
In this episode, Pen talks about communication theory and how it can explain common miscommunications between neurodivergent & neurotypical people. (Also, they just think it's neat.)Featuring: Aristotle's been dead for thousands of years, can we please move on; Pen's editorialized class notes; "Commune" vs. "-ation"; Animal Planet: Most Extreme Communication; Society's Unwritten Rules (ugh); The value in talking trash; Put some cereal and milk in your brain.Suicide Hotline & Resources for Trans People: https://translifeline.org/USA Suicide Prevention: https://suicidepreventionlifeline.org/International Suicide Hotlines: https://www.opencounseling.com/suicide-hotlinesSuicide Hotline & Resources for LGBTQ+ Young People: https://www.thetrevorproject.org/Ways to support Black Lives Matter and find anti-racism resources:https://linktr.ee/blacklivesmatteResources to support AAPI (Asian-American & Pacific Islander) communities:https://www.advancingjustice-aajc.org/https://stopaapihate.org/Resources for US Immigrants:https://www.informedimmigrant.com/Resources to Support Undocumented Immigrants in the US:https://immigrationjustice.us/
We are so excited to have Melissa Thompson, PhD on the pod! She talks all about earning her PhD in Communication Theory from the University of Memphis, living in Louisiana, her love for the Peloton, and so much more. Get ready to be inspired and motivated! Thanks for coming on the show, Melissa!Don't forget to enter our giveaway with OptimU Aesthetics. Visit our Instagram to check it out. Thanks, Paige! Home (optimumedical.com)Contact Melissa Thompson: About Us - Success Labs (mysuccesslab.com)Coco + Eve: Award Winning Bali Beauty Products - Natural & Effective | Coco & Eve (cocoandeve.com)Catch up on Louisiana Ladies on Apple Podcasts and Spotify!Follow Louisiana Ladies on Instagram and FacebookWanna chat? Email louisianaladiespodcast@gmail.com.
Sam Van Aken is my guest on this episode of Inside Ideas. Sam is a contemporary artist who works beyond traditional modes of art making, crossing artistic genres and disciplines to develop new perspectives on such themes as agriculture, botany, climatology, memory, and the ever-increasing impact of technology. Sam works in the natural and public realm are seen as metaphors that serve as the basis of narrative, sites of place making, collective learning, and in some cases have become the basis of scientific research. Born in Reading Pennsylvania, Sam received his undergraduate education in Art and Communication Theory. Immediately following his studies he lived in Poland and worked with dissident artists under the former communist regime through the auspices of the Andy Warhol Foundation and the United States Information Agency. Sam received his MFA from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and since this time his work has been exhibited and placed nationally and internationally. He has received numerous honors including a Joan Mitchell Foundation Award, Association of International Curator's of Art Award and a Creative Capital Grant. Most recently, his work has been presented as part of Nature-Cooper Hewitt Design Triennial with the Cube Design Museum, Netherlands as well as at the 2020 World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. His most recent work, the Open Orchard is set to unveil summer 2021 on Governor's Island, New York City. Sam lives and works in Syracuse New York, where he is currently an Associate Professor in the School of Art at Syracuse University. His work is represented by Ronald Feldman Fine Arts. https://www.samvanmaken.com/
When you start architecture school, you may be required to take a class called communications, or visual representation or something similar. This is going to be new to most people whether you have done any kind of drawing, graphics or design before. So it's important to know the point of a Communications class. Listen to the full episode to learn: ** The purpose of architectural communication and classes. ** Types of architectural communication. ** The teaching style and content. ** Communications class and subject format. ** Workload and independent study. READ THE ARTICLE HERE - https://archimash.com/articles/communications-class WATCH THE VIDEO HERE - https://archimash.com/videos/communications-class-2 RESOURCES and LINKS ** All of my free gifts in one place - https://archimash.com/free ** My favourite tools, apps and resources - https://archimash.com/resources CONNECT WITH ME ** Website - https://archimash.com ** Newsletter - https://archimash.com/free/news ** Social Media Channels - https://archimash.com/connect ** Contact Email or Questions - https://archimash.com/contact NOTE: This podcast and description may contain connections to affiliate links, which means that if you click on one of the product links, I'll receive a small commission. This helps support the channel and allows me to continue to make videos like this. I only recommend products that I use and love. Thank you for your support!
On this episode of Voice of Music Therapy, I sit down with Freddy Perkins to discuss discovering your identity while exploring the power of authenticity. Guest Freddy Perkins Episode Playlist Be Yourself - Frank Ocean I am light - India Arie Bigger - Beyoncé Q.U.E.E.N. - Janelle Monae Put Your Record On - Corinne Bailey Rae That's On Me - Mac Miller Human - Acoustic - Jon Bellion Honest Man - Ben Platt I love me - Demi Lovato ME! - Taylor Swift C.R.E.A.M. - Wu-Tang Clan Like A Girl - Lizzo Reference Links Attune Music and Wellness | https://www.facebook.com/attunemusicandwellness Instagram | @attunemusicandwellness Email | freddie@attunemusicwellness.com An Application of the Communication Theory of Identity - Research Article | https://digitalcommons.pepperdine.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1082&context=pjcr Created and Produced by Brian Locascio, MT-BC Edited by Alec Henn --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/vomt/support
I, Annette, am a HUGE nerd! And how could we let a series about healthy conversation go by without discussing some communication theory you can use every day! Here's a couple pro tips all about: Value Statements Ogden's Triangle of Meaning Knowing Your Audience Defining Terms Creating Outlines to Keep the Main Thing the Main Thing --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thatswhatithought/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/thatswhatithought/support
Copyright disclaimer, this episode has audio clips from Yes Prime Minister, White Collar, and The Red Green Show. These clips are being used for educational purposes only. DJ Finley does not claim to own any rights to these properties. Ego-involvement: refers to how crucial something is to someones live or argument. LUUUUTT Model. Information about these models was taken from "A First Look at Communication Theory" by Em Griffin. Check out DJ Finley's website for more information: https://kiarafinleyhorowitz.wordpress.com/ Email: seriesoflivesinc@gmail.com --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
In this episode, Kamaar, George, and Shannon Yerkic discuss the difference between passive and active responders. Shannon brings a great energy in explaining how important listening skills are when engaging potential students. He also explains the importance of training in regards to demographic, gender, and socioeconomic factors. Shannon's passion for higher education is palpable during this episode. Have a listen!
How do you tell someone’s story in a book without actually writing your story of learning their story? What is qualitative research? We answer those questions and more as I nerd out with Drs. Patricia Geist-Mart and Sarah Parsloe about Communication theory. In Episode 110, I talked with Bill Torres, the subject of the book, “Falling in Love with the Process.” You can listen to that episode here. In this episode, I talk with the authors of the book, Dr. Patricia Geist-Martin and Dr. Sarah Parsloe, professors of Communications at San Diego State University and Rollins University respectively. The result is a wide ranging discussion that let me nerd out a bit about Communication Theory, which is something I haven’t talked a whole lot about since college. We discuss topics like: What communication is and how it defines relationships The nature of qualitative research The challenges in telling someone else’s story Cyberactivism Ableism and intersectionality Inspiration porn …and much more And you’ll get to hear more about what it’s like to work with Bill. Bios Patricia Geist-Martin (Ph.D. Purdue University) is a Professor Emerita in the School of Communication at San Diego State University. Her research examines the stories people tell in making sense of their lives, particularly in their journeys through health and illness. Falling in Love with the Process: Cultivating Resilience in Health Crises: A Stroke Survivor’s Story (2020), is Dr. Geist-Martin’s fifth book. Website: https://patriciageistmartin.com 150 Sarah Parsloe (Ph.D. Communication, Ohio University) is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Communication at Rollins College, Winter Park, FL. Her research examines the ways in which people make sense of identity threats that arise from experiences of disability and chronic illness, including uncertainty, stigma, and prejudice against people with disabilities (ableism). She is particularly interested in studying the communication processes of (self-)advocacy. Movies We talked briefly about a couple movies that came to mind while talking with Bill. Here are the trailers. Lessons Learned Patricia spoke about the about the amazing resilience she learned from Bill. The fact that we can go through so much and then still go out and do the work of recovery is amazing. And then to go beyond our own recovery to helping others as Bill has done is a powerful thing. Sarah talked about two lessons she learned from Bill. The first is the importance of relationships. Bill has friends he’s known for decades and he continued to feed those relationships throughout his life both before and after his stroke. And when he needed them — they were there. Maintaining relationship later in life goes a long way to not only enriching that live but also in feeding health. Speaking of feeding one’s health, Sarah also learned from watching Bill feed the ducks. He has something he cares about and takes care of every day. After stroke, it’s easy to think we can’t take care of others because we have to be taken care of, but that’s a dangerous path to go down. Taking care of others can be an important way to drive our own sense of importance (in a good way) even if it’s in a different context. Maybe we can’t take care of others the same way we could before stroke, but maybe there’s a new way of providing moral or emotional support while still getting support and care from others. Even if that means finding some hungry ducks. From my perspective, the worst thing that can happen to a person is to have nothing to do. It’s fine in limited doses, but having nothing to — no reason to start the day — can lead to a nasty spiral of depression. It’s why so many people die within a year of retiring from their jobs. Or maybe you’re just getting a peek at my own anxieties there. Cyber Activism We talked a bit about cyber activism and how social media has given disabled people and people with disabilities a way to raise their concerns and say ableism and Eugenics are not ok. It’s a tool that means this community will not be ignored. Twitter hashtags are some of the places where these stories come out, including: #AbledsAreWeird #CripTheVote #NoBodyIsDisposable We talked about Dr. Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw who developed the theory of Intersectionality when discussing issues of race, disability, gender and more. You can read more about her work here: https://aapf.org/our-team Talila A. Lewis is a lawyer and activist focusing on deaf wrongful conviction cases Talila founded the HEARD organization. You can read more about Talila’s work here: https://www.talilalewis.com/about.html Hack of the Week Singing is sometimes a way to get words out for folks who struggle with aphasia. Because of the way the brain is wired, singing can get based block in the traditional language centers. If you find yourself fighting to speak the words, try to do a little song. Links Falling in Love with the Process https://he.kendallhunt.com/product/falling-love-process-cultivating-resilience-health-crisis-stroke-survivors-story Falling in Love with the Process on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/fallinginlovewiththeprocess Falling in Love with the Process on Amazon https://www.amazon.com/Falling-Love-Process-Cultivating-Resilience/dp/1524989894/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=falling+in+love+with+the+process&qid=1600308306&sr=8-1 Patricia Geist-Martin, Ph.D. on the web https://www.patriciageistmartin.com/ Patricia Geist-Martin, Ph.D. on SDSU https://communication.sdsu.edu/faculty_and_staff/profile/-patricia-geist-martin Patricia’s email pgeist@sdsu.edu Sarah Parsloe, Ph.D at Rollins University https://www.rollins.edu/communication/faculty-staff-listing/ Sarah Parsloe, Ph.D on research Gate https://www.researchgate.net/scientific-contributions/Sarah-Parsloe-2123013686 Sarah’s email sparsloe@rollins.edu Bill Torres on Strokecast http://Strokecast.com/BillTorres Patricia and Bill on the Hand In Hand show https://www.handinhandshow.com/2020/07/18/episode-101-enjoy-the-recovery-process-bill-shares-his-journey/?fbclid=IwAR1T8DLyL81bKT0vcA4ax8_UXmIGGV3Cmvmk-3VlJxGMkzreaR3aYKQ5Lrg Neuro Nerds Podcast http://TheNeuroNerds.com Joe Borges on Strokecast http://Strokecast.com/NeuroNerds Pathos, Logos, and Ethos http://2minutetalktips.com/2017/11/07/episode-035-let-the-audience-react-and-ancient-rhetoric-today/ Arrival — Trailer https://youtu.be/tFMo3UJ4B4g Big Fish — Trailer https://youtu.be/M3YVTgTl-F0 #AbledsAreWeird on Twitter https://twitter.com/search?q=%23AbledsAreWeird&src=typed_query #CripTheVote on Twitter https://twitter.com/search?q=%23cripthevote&src=typed_query #NoBodyIsDisposable https://twitter.com/search?q=%23NoBodyIsDisposable&src=typed_query Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw on Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kimberl%C3%A9_Williams_Crenshaw TL Lewis website https://www.talilalewis.com/ Heard http://behearddc.org/ Alice Wong on Twitter https://twitter.com/SFdirewolf Autoethnography on Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autoethnography#:~:text=Autoethnography%20is%20a%20form%20of,and%20social%20meanings%20and%20understandings. The Hero’s Journey on Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hero%27s_journey Where do we go from here? Order the book from the publisher or Amazon if you want to hear more about Bill Torres and falling in love with the process. Share this episode with academic, professor, or college student in your life by giving them the link http://Strokecast.com/Process. Follow me on Instagram at Bills_Instagram. Don’t get best…get better. Strokecast is the stroke podcast where a Gen X stroke survivor explores rehab, recovery, the frontiers of neuroscience and one-handed banana peeling by helping stroke survivors, caregivers, medical providers and stroke industry affiliates connect and share their stories.
The name Claude Shannon has come up 8 times so far in this podcast. More than any single person. We covered George Boole and the concept that Boolean is a 0 and a 1 and that using Boolean algebra, you can abstract simple circuits into practically any higher level concept. And Boolean algebra had been used by a number of mathematicians, to perform some complex tasks. Including by Lewis Carroll in Through The Looking Glass to make words into math. And binary had effectively been used in morse code to enable communications over the telegraph. But it was Claude Shannon who laid the foundation for making a theory that took both the concept of communicating over the telegraph and applying Boolean algebra to get to a higher level of communication possible. And it all starts with bits, which we can thank Shannon for. Shannon grew up in Gaylord, Michigan. His mother was a high school principal and his grandfather had been an inventor. He built a telegraph as a child, using a barbed wire fence. But barbed wire isn't the greatest conducer of electricity and so… noise. And thus information theory began to ruminate in his mind. He went off to the University of Michigan and got a Bachelors in electrical engineering and another in math. A perfect combination for laying the foundation of the future. And he got a job as a research assistant to Vannevar Bash, who wrote the seminal paper, As We May Think. At that time, Bush was working at MIT on The Thinking Machine, or Differential Analyzer. This was before World War II and they had no idea, but their work was about to reshape everything. At the time, what we think of as computers today, were electro-mechanical. They had gears that were used for the more complicated tasks, and switches, used for simpler tasks. Shannon devoted his masters thesis to applying Boolean algebra, thus getting rid of the wheels, which moved slowly, and allowing the computer to go much faster. He broke down Boole's Laws of Thought into a manner it could be applied to parallel circuitry. That paper was called A Symbolic Analysis of Relay and Switching Circuits in 1937 and helped set the stage for the Hackers revolution that came shortly thereafter at MIT. At the urging of Vannevar Bush, he got his PhD in Biology, pushing genetics forward by theorizing that you could break the genetic code down into a matrix. The structure of DNA would be discovered by George Gamow in 1953 and Watson and Crick would discover the helix and Rosalind Franklin would use X-ray crystallography to capture the first photo of the structure. He headed off to Princeton in 1940 to work at the Institute for Advanced Study, where Einstein and von Neumann were. He quickly moved over to the National Defense Research Committee, as the world was moving towards World War II. A lot of computing was going into making projectiles, or bombs, more accurate. He co-wrote a paper called Data Smoothing and Prediction in Fire-Control Systems during the war. He'd gotten a primer in early cryptography, reading The Gold-Bug by Edgar Allan Poe as a kid. And it struck his fancy. So he started working on theories around cryptography, everything he'd learned forming into a single theory. He would have lunch with Alan Turning during the war. He would And it was around this work that he first coined the term “information theory” in 1945. A universal theory of communication gnawed at him and formed during this time, from the Institute, to the National Defense Research Committee, to Bell Labs, where he helped encrypt communications between world leaders. He hid it from everyone, including failed relationships. He broke information down into the smallest possible unit, a bit, short for a binary digit. He worked out how to compress information that was most repetitive. Similar to how morse code compressed the number of taps on the electrical wire by making the most common letters the shortest to send. Eliminating redundant communications established what we now call compression. Today we use the term lossless compression frequently in computing. He worked out that the minimum amount of information to send would be H = - Sigma Pi log2 Pi - or entropy. His paper, put out while he was at Bell, was called “A mathematical theory or communication” and came out in 1948. You could now change any data to a zero or a one and then compress it. Further, he had to find a way to calculate the maximum amount of information that could be sent over a communication channel before it became garbled, due to loss. We now call this the Shannon Limit. And so once we have that, he derived how to analyze information with math to correct for noise. That barbed wire fence could finally be useful. This would be used in all modern information connectivity. For example, when I took my Network+ we spent an inordinate amount of time learning about Carrier-sense multiple access with collision detection (CSMA/CD) - a media access control (MAC) method that used carrier-sensing to defer transmissions until no other stations are transmitting. And as his employer, Bell Labs helped shape the future of computing. Along with Unix, C, C++, the transistor, the laser, information theory is a less tangible yet given what we all have in our pockets on on our wrists these days, more tangible discovery. Having mapped the limits, Bell started looking to reach the limit. And so the digital communication age was born when the first modem would come out of his former employer, Bell Labs, in 1958. And just across the way in Boston, ARPA would begin working on the first Interface Message Processor in 1967, the humble beginnings of the Internet. His work done, he went back to MIT. His theories were applied to all sorts of disciplines. But he comes in less and less. Over time we started placing bits on devices. We started retrieving those bits. We started compressing data. Digital images, audio, and more. It would take 35 or so years He consulted with the NSA on cryptography. In 1949 he published Communication Theory of Secrecy Systems, pushed cryptography to the next level. His paper Prediction and Entropy of Printed English in 1951 practically created the field of natural language processing, which evolved into various branches of machine learning. He helped give us the Nyquist–Shannon sampling theorem, used in aliasing, deriving maximum throughput, RGB, and of course signal to noise. He loved games. In 1941 he theorized the Shannon Number, or the game-tree complexity of chess. In case you're curious, the reason deep blue can win at chess is that it can brute force 10 to the 120th power. His love of games continued and in 1949 he presented Programming a Computer for Playing Chess. That was the first time we thought about computers playing chess. And he'd have a standing bet that a computer would beat a human grand master at chess by 2001. Garry Kasparov lost to Deep Blue in 1997. That curiosity extended far beyond chess. He would make Theseus in 1950 - a maze with a mouse that learned how to escape, using relays from phone switches. One of the earliest forms of machine learning. In 1961 he would co-invent the first wearable computer to help win a game of roulette. That same year he designed the Minivan 601 to help teach how computers worked. So we'll leave you with one last bit of information. Shannon's maxim is that “the enemy knows the system.” I used to think it was just a shortened version of Kerckhoffs's principle, which is that it should be possible to understand a cryptographic system, for example, modern public key ciphers, but not be able to break the encryption without a private key. Thing is, the more I know about Shannon the more I suspect that what he was really doing was giving the principle a broader meaning. So think about that as you try and decipher what is and what is not disinformation in such a noisy world. Lots and lots of people would cary on the great work in information theory. Like Kullback–Leibler divergence, or relative entropy. And we owe them all our thanks. But here's the thing about Shannon: math. He took things that could have easily been theorized - and he proved them. Because science can refute disinformation. If you let it.
I speak about the unusual expression "feeling under the weather", an idiom with simple nautical origins. Also, I flaunt my love for board games, particularly social deception games, and the science behind small group communication theory. Check out the references and transcript to this episode here: https://www.kjbmercurio.com/episode/014.Support the show
Conversations avec...un article. C'est 10-15 minutes où je rends compte d'un article scientifique récent paru dans une revue en sciences humaines et sociales. Episode 14 : "Je suis femme, noire et musulmane", des corps indisciplinés sur Instagram. L'article original : Kristin M. Peterson, "The Unruly, Loud, and Intersectional Muslim Woman: Interrupting the Aesthetic Styles of Islamic Fashion Images on Instagram", International Journal of Communication, 14(0), 2020, p. 20. Le profil Instagram de Leah V, dont l'autrice de l'article fait l'étude : https://www.instagram.com/lvernon2000/ --------- Les références citées dans l'article et mobilisées implicitement dans le podcast : Kristin M. Peterson, “Beyond Fashion Tips and Hijab Tutorials: The Aesthetic Style of Islamic Lifestyle Videos”, Film Criticism, 40(2), 2016. Fatima El-Tayeb, European Others: Queering Ethnicity in Postnational Europe, Univ Of Minnesota Press, 2011. Emma Tarlo et Annelies Moors, Islamic Fashion and Anti-Fashion: New Perspectives from Europe and North America, 1re éd. Bloomsbury Academic, 2013. Crystal Abidin, “Visibility labour: Engaging with Influencers' fashion brands and #OOTD advertorial campaigns on Instagram”, Media International Australia, 2016. --------- Pour aller plus loin : Un appel à communications récent de la revue "Itinéraires" sur toutes ces questions (féminisme, radicalisation, colonisation, etc.) : https://journals.openedition.org/itineraires/7245 **Féminisme** Zahra Ali, féminismes islamiques, La Fabrique éditions, 2020. Françoise Vergès, Un féminisme décolonial, La fabrique éditions, 2019. **Intersectionnalité** : Sara Bernstein, "The metaphysics of intersectionality", Philosophical Studies, 177(2), 2020, p. 321‑335. Maria Rodó-Zárate et Marta Jorba, "Metaphors of intersectionality: Reframing the debate with a new proposal", European Journal of Women's Studies, 2020. Alberta Giorgi, "Religious feminists and the intersectional feminist movements: Insights from a case study", European Journal of Women's Studies, 2020. LaToya D. Council et al., "Linking Contexts, Intersectionality, and Generations: Toward a Multidimensional Theory of Millennials and Social Change", Sociological Perspectives, 2020. Ross Singer, "Toward Intersectional Ecofeminist Communication Studies", Communication Theory. Adresse : https://academic.oup.com/ct/advance-article/doi/10.1093/ct/qtz023/5625877 [Consulté le : 5 avril 2020].
This week we discuss the hard topic of difficult conversations. With COVID 19 and the Black Lives Matter movement, it's imperative that we learn how to talk with each other. Samuel shares his experience with Communication Theory, which compliments Julie's mental health studies. We tackle felt safety, as well as some strategies for calming down. I hope you enjoy this week!---Get access to bonus content and support the show through PatreonSpecial Thanks to Julie Richards at jhrcounseling.com.Please reach out by liking us on Facebook or Instagram or emailing us at communityroutes.pod@gmail.comPlease rate us on iTunes! We need all the help we can get to spread the word about mental health.Our other links: https://linktr.ee/communityroutes
The communications model, featured in every intro-to-business/marketing/communications/HR textbook the world over...is flawed by its assumption of human behaviour. Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.
Conversations avec...un article. C'est 10-15 minutes où je rends compte d'un article scientifique récent paru dans une revue en sciences humaines et sociales. Episode 7 : la présence toujours très vive de l'apartheid dans la mémoire des enfants d'Afrique du Sud. L'article original : Amber R. Reed, "Racialized Space: Children Map the Post-Apartheid Landscape", Visual Anthropology Review, 35(2), 2019, p. 162‑175. --------- Pour aller (un peu) plus loin : **Sur la carte** : Christian Jacob, L'Empire des cartes : Approche théorique de la cartographie à travers l'histoire, Paris, Albin Michel, 1992. Pascal Robert et Emmanuël Souchier, "La carte, un média entre sémiotique et politique La carte au rivage des SIC", Communication & langages, 2008(158), 2008, p. 25. **Sur les "White studies", l'intersectionnalité et les études postcoloniales** : Aisha M. Beliso-De Jesús et Jemima Pierre, "Special Section: Anthropology of White Supremacy", American Anthropologist, 122(1), 2020, p. 65‑75. Natalie Benelli et al., "Les approches postcoloniales : apports pour un féminisme antiraciste", Nouvelles Questions Feministes, Vol. 25(3), 2006, p. 4‑12. Sara Bernstein, "The metaphysics of intersectionality", Philosophical Studies, 177(2), 2020, p. 321‑335. Maxime Cervulle, Dans le blanc des yeux. Diversité, racisme et médias, Paris, Éditions Amsterdam, 2013. Ming Dong Gu, "What is ‘decoloniality'? A postcolonial critique", Postcolonial Studies, 0(0), 2020, p. 1‑5. Metji Makgoba, "Constructing black economic empowerment in South African mining: Government v corporate discourse", African Studies, 78(4), 2019, p. 568‑589. Junaid Rana, "Anthropology and the Riddle of White Supremacy", American Anthropologist, 122(1), 2020, p. 99‑111. Ross Singer, "Toward Intersectional Ecofeminist Communication Studies", Communication Theory. Adresse : https://academic.oup.com/ct/advance-article/doi/10.1093/ct/qtz023/5625877. Un appel récent de la revue Itinéraires : "Race et discours. Langues, intersectionnalité, décolonialités".
Part II of II of our conversation with Dr. Eric McLuhan, Canadian author/lecturer on a plethora of areas including Communication Theory, Media Ecology, Egyptology, Language, Finnegans Wake. Special thanks to Andrew McLuh...
Part II of II of our conversation with Dr. Eric McLuhan, Canadian author/lecturer on a plethora of areas including Communication Theory, Media Ecology, Egyptology, Language, Finnegans Wake. Special thanks to Andrew McLuh...
Welcome to the History of Computing Podcast, where we explore the history of information technology. Because understanding the past prepares us to innovate of the future! Todays episode is is on the microphone. Now you might say “wait, that's not a computer-thing. But given that every computer made in the past decade has one, including your phone, I would beg to differ. Also, every time I record one of these episodes, I seem to get a little better with wielding the instruments, which has led me to spend way more time than is probably appropriate learning about them. So what exactly is a microphone? Well, it's a simple device that converts mechanical waves of energy into electrical waves of energy. Microphones have a diaphragm, much as we humans do and that diaphragm mirrors the sound waves it picks up. So where did these microphones come from? Well, Robert Hooke got the credit for hooking a string to a cup in 1665 and suddenly humans could push sound over distances. Then in 1827 Charles Wheatstone, who invented the telegraph put the word microphone into our vernacular. 1861 rolls around and Johan Philipp Reis build the Reis telephone, which electrified the microphone using a metallic strip that was attached to a vibrating membrane. When a little current was passed through it, it reproduced sound far away. Think of this as more of using electricity to amplify the effects of the string on the cup. But critically, sound had been turned into signal. In 1876, Emile Berliner built a modern microphone while working on the gramophone. He was working with Thomas Edison at the time and would go on to sell the patent for the Microphone to The Bell Telephone Company. Now, Alexander Graham Bell had designed a telephone transmitter in 1876 but ended up in a patent dispute with David Edward Hughes. And as he did with many a great idea, Thomas Edison made the first practical microphone in 1886. This was a carbon microphone that would go on to be used for almost a hundred years. It could produce sound but it kinda' sucked for music. It was used in the first radio broadcast in New York in 1910. The name comes from the cranes of carbon that are packed between two metal plates. Edison would end up introducing the diaphragm and the carbon button microphone would become the standard. That microphone though, often still had a built0-in amp, strengthening the voltage that was the signal sound had been converted to. 1915 rolls around and we get the vacuum tube amplifier. And in 1916, E.C. Wente of Bell Laboratories designed the condenser microphone. This still used two plates, but each had an electrical charge and when the sound vibrations moved the plates, the signal was electronically amplified. Georg Neumann then had the idea to use gold plated PVC and design the mic such that as sound reached the back of the microphone it would be cancelled, resulting in a cardioid pattern, making it the first cardioid microphone and an ancestor to the microphone I'm using right now. In the meantime, other advancements were coming. Electromagnets made it possible to add moving coils and ribbons and Wente and A.C. Thuras would then invent the dynamic, or moving-coil microphone in 1931. This was much more of an omnidirectional pattern and It wasn't until 1959 that the Unidyne III became the first mic to pull in sound from the top of the mic, which would change the shape and look of the microphone forever. Then in 1964 Bell Labs brought us the electrostatic transducer mic and the microphone exploded with over a billion of these built every year. Then Sennheiser gave us clip-on microphones in the 80s, calling their system the Mikroport and releasing it through Telefunken. No, Bootsie Collins was not a member of Telefunken. He'd been touring with James Brown for awhile ad by then was with the Parliament Funkadelic. Funk made a lot of use of all these innovations in sound though. So I see why you might be confused. Other than the fact that all of this was leading us up to a point of being able to use microphones in computers, where's the connection? Well, remember Bell Labs? In 1962 they invented the electret microphone. Here the electrically biased diaphragms have a capacitor that changes with the vibrations of sound waves. Robert Noyce had given us the integrated circuit in 1959 and of microphones couldn't escape the upcoming Moore's law, as every electronics industry started looking for applications. Honeywell came along with silicon pressure sensors, and by 65 Harvey Nathanson gave us a resonant-gated transistors. That would be put on a Monolithic chip by 66 and through the 70s micro sensors were developed to isolate every imaginable environmental parameter, including sound. At this point, computers were still big hulking things. But computers and sound had been working their way into the world for a couple of decades. The technologies would evolve into one another at some point obviously. In 1951, Geoff Hill pushed pules to a speaker using the Australian CSIRAC and Max Mathews at Bell Labs had been doing sound generation on an IBM 704 using the MUSIC program, which went a step further and actually created digital audio using PCM, or Pulse-Code Modulation. The concept of sending multiplexed signals over a wire had started with the telegraph back in the 1870s but the facsimile, or fax machine, used it as far back as 1920. But the science and the math wasn't explaining it all to allow for the computer to handle the rules required. It was Bernard Oliver and Claude Shannon that really put PCM on the map. We've mentioned Claude Shannon on the podcast before. He met Alan Turing in 43 and went on to write crazy papers like A Mathematical Theory of Cryptography, Communication Theory of Secrecy Systems, and A Mathematical Theory of Communications. And he helped birth the field of information theory. When the math nerds showed up, microphones got way cooler. By the way, he liked to juggle on a unicycle. I would too if I could. They documented that you could convert audio to digital by sampling audio and modulation would be mapping the audio on a sine wave at regular intervals. This analog-to-digital converter could then be printed on a chip that would output encoded digital data that would live on storage. Demodulate that with a digital to analog converter, apply an amplification, and you have the paradigm for computer sound. There's way more, like anti-aliasing and reconstruction filters, but someone will always think you're over-simplifying. So the evolutions came, giving us multi-track stereo casettes, the fax machines and eventually getting to the point that this recording will get exported into a 16-bit PCM wave file. PCM would end up evolving to LPCM, or Linear pulse-control modulation and be used in CDs, DVDs, and Blu-ray's. Oh and lossleslly compressed to mp3, mpeg4, etc. By the 50s, MIT hackers would start producing sound and even use the computer to emit the same sounds Captain Crunch discovered the tone for, so they could make free phone calls. They used a lot of paper tape then, but with magnetic tape and then hard drives, computers would become more and more active in audio. By 61 John Kelly Jr and Carol Lockbaum made an IBM 7094 mainframe sing Daisy Bell. Arthur C. Clarke happened to see it and that made it into 2001: A Space Odyssey. Remember hearing it sing that when it was getting taken apart? But the digital era of sound recording is marked as starting with the explosion of Sony in the 1970s. Moore's Law, they got smaller, faster, and cheaper and by the 2000s microelectromechanical microphones web mainstream, which are what are built into laptops, cell phones, and headsets. You see, by then it was all on a single chip. Or even shared a chip. These are still mostly omnidirectional. But in modern headphones, like Apple AirPods then you're using dual beam forming microphones. Beamforming uses multiple sensor arrays to extract sounds based on a whole lot of math; the confluence of machine learning and the microphone. You see, humans have known to do many of these things for centuries. We hooked a cup to a wire and sound came out the other side. We electrified it. We then started going from engineering to pure science. We then analyzed it with all the math so we better understood the rules. And that last step is when it's time to start writing software. Or sometimes it's controlling things with software that gives us the necessary understanding to make the next innovative leap. The invention of the microphone doesn't really belong to one person. Hook, Wheatstone, Reis, Alexander Graham Bell, Thomas Edison, Wente, Thuras, Shannon, Hill, Matthews, and many, many more had a hand in putting that crappy mic in your laptop, the really good mic in your cell phone, and the stupidly good mic in your headphones. Some are even starting to move over to Piezoelectric. But I think I'll save that for another episode. The microphone is a great example of that slow, methodical rise, and iterative innovation that makes technologies truly lasting. It's not always shockingly abrupt or disruptive. But those innovations are permanently world-changing. Just think, because of the microphone and computer getting together for a blind date in the 40s you can now record your hit album in Garage Band. For free. Or you call your parents any time you want. Now pretty much for free. So thank you for sticking with me through all of this. It's been a blast. You should probably call your parents now. I'm sure they'd love to hear from you. But before you do, thank you for tuning in to yet another episode of the History of Computing Podcast. We're so lucky to have you. Have a great day!
みずのけいすけ(@mikkemac)をゲストに迎えて、会社員としての情報発信、平成ネット史(仮)、編集者は最終的には雑用であることなどについて話しました。 Show Notes: 021: Update(mikkemac) – fragment.fm臼井 隆志|ワークショップデザイナー|noteアップル、大きな戦略変更。「サムスンのTVがiTunes Videoなどに対応」が持つ大きな意味 | BUSINESS INSIDER JAPAN今年のCESはアップルが陰の主役? 新テレビが相次ぎ AirPlay 2 対応、何がどう便利になるのか - PHILE WEBApple、CESに出展してないのに異様な存在感を放つ | ギズモード・ジャパン Starring:
Pandora is fielding phone calls, and, as always, the microphone is listening. MOU is written by Raeanna Nicole Larson. Pandora is voiced by Raeanna Nicole Larson. Editing by Luuk Van Hoomissen. Theme song "Medusa" by Teddy McKrell. For more information and transcripts, please go to www.mountolympusuniversity.com.
Ja, was ist Kommunikation eigentlich? Ich versuche mich dem Thema Kommunikation in der aktuellen Podcastfolge zu nähern und ziehe dazu auch die ein oder andere Theorie in Betracht. Wie im letzten Blogpost schon erwähnt ist eine Theorie nichts anderes als ein Plan. Ein Plan dafür, wie bestimmte Dinge in der Praxis ablaufen. Damit Kommunikation ganzheitlich gelingt, muss man verstehen, was dahintersteckt. Klicke auf Play und los geht’s! Zum Kommunikationscode-Blog: www.kommunikationscode.de Literaturempfehlungen: Bühler, Karl (1934) Sprachtheorie. Die Darstellungsfunktion der Sprache. Stuttgart u. New York: Fischer Griffin, R. (2009). A First Look at Communication Theory (7th Edition). Boston: McGraw-Hill. Thun, Friedemann Schulz von: Miteinander reden 1 : Störungen und Klärungen: Allgemeine Psychologie der Kommunikation. Reinbek bei Hamburg: Rowohlt Verlag GmbH, 2013. Toschka, Maike: Kommunikationsmodell nach Paul Watzlawick : Axiome. München: GRIN Verlag, 2009. Intro & Outro: Reiswerk - Altar CC BY 4.0 (gekürzt und kombiniert mit Einsprecher)
Today we welcome Dr. Jason Eure, DPT on the show today for a great discussion on the breakdown of communication theory and how it relates to clinical and educational practice, how to minimize potential problems from the communication sender and receiver roles, how to assess people's beliefs and change them, how to separate beliefs from identity during interactions, how to best ask a client/student for educational retention, how to best give feedback to a student, and much more! Jason will be providing a free webinar on the following topic--- Tendinopathy Management: Science-Based Rehab for Athletes - led by ClinicalAthlete Forum member and Physical Therapist Jason Eure. [REGISTRATION LINK] www.clinicalathlete.com/jason-eure-webinar/ Jason's Bio Jason Eure is a physical therapist practicing out of Fairfax, Virginia at Select and he is also an Online Instructor through the University of St. Augustine where he teaches Evidence Informed Practice. He got his Bachelor's Degree in Human Nutrition and Exercise from Virginia Tech University in 2011. He graduated from the University of St. Augustine in 2013 where he earned his DPT and was awarded the Stanley Paris and Catherine Patla Award for Excellence in Manual Therapy. He also worked as a volunteer assistant strength & conditioning coach at both the University of Richmond and Virginia Tech University. Podcast Episode with Karen Litzy on The Healthy Wealthy and Smart podcast on Intraprofessional Communication https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/291-dr-jason-eure-dpt-intraprofessional-communication/id532717264?i=1000391277296&mt=2 Podcast Episode featuring Jason on the Clinical Athlete Podcast on Tendinopthy https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/episode-3-came-for-tendinopathy-but-stayed-for-donuts/id1253517238?i=1000391652796&mt=2
Christopher Ali is an assistant professor at the University of Virginia. His research interests focus on communication policy and regulation, critical political economy, critical geography, comparative media systems, localism, and local news. Ali has published in numerous journals, including Communication Theory, Media Culture & Society, and International Journal of Communication. His forthcoming book, Media Localism: The Policies of Place (University of Illinois Press, 2017), addresses the difficulties of defining and regulating local media in the 21st century in the United States, United Kingdom, and Canada and the implications these difficulties have for the long-term viability of local news. Watch our interview with Christopher in the studio: https://youtu.be/Opo8Q_k5RUs Watch Christopher's talk: https://youtu.be/BpuisVyCOrw Want to listen to this interview a different way? Find us wherever you get your podcasts: iTunes: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/demy%E2%80%A6ia/id1369395906 Stitcher: https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/university-of-oregon-school-of-journalism-and-communication/demystifying-media-podcast?refid=stpr Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/2Och6Oxpkhyo1nC7D6psHI Find more Demystifying Media talks on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EiELNjgZJJI&list=PLoqXTlv_f5zEJifP55GP1ghtQjY3tzoI0 Watch our Q&As with media experts on fake news, data journalism, privacy in the age of Google, indigenous media, technology trends, Facebook algorithms, and so much more: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iTiuV9h-MKA&list=PLoqXTlv_f5zGu5TJeuL1SMBVCXlM4ViyL Read the transcript of this episode: https://www.scribd.com/document/463629260/Demystifying-Media-3-The-Future-of-Local-Newspapers-with-Christopher-Ali
Part I of II of our conversation with Dr. Eric McLuhan, Canadian author/lecturer on a plethora of areas including Communication Theory, Media Ecology, Egyptology, Language, Finnegans Wake. Special thanks to Andrew McLuhan for facilitating the recordi... Visit: http://www.ericmcluhan.com
Part I of II of our conversation with Dr. Eric McLuhan, Canadian author/lecturer on a plethora of areas including Communication Theory, Media Ecology, Egyptology, Language, Finnegans Wake. Special thanks to Andrew McLuhan for facilitating the recordi... Visit: http://www.ericmcluhan.com
Join Christy Demetrakis and her special guest Wolfgang Wolf for "I used to drive a BMW, now I get around in a wheelchair." Tuesday, September 15th at 6:30pm EST. About Wolfgang Wolf: Wolfgang Wolf was born in 1951 in Leipzig, GDR, he was taken by his parents to West Germany (FRG) at the age of 10 months because his father was sentenced to 18 years in Siberia for an alleged assassination attempt on the Russian dictator Joseph Stalin. He grew up in a refugee camp near Stuttgart until 1957. Having studied Visual Communication, Semiotics and Communication Theory , Wolfgang went on to work in Advertising and Direct Marketing (first as graphic designer, later a copywriter). In 1980 he emigrated to New Zealand, travelled up and down the country, photographed a lot, co-founded Ogilvy & Mather Direct, and was their Creative Director. He worked half a year in Los Angeles, USA, and founded his own agency in Auckland, New Zealand, in 1985. Then in 1990 he had a major stroke, which he barely survived. It left him in a wheelchair, unable to write, barely able to stand, and talk. He did not give up and feel sorry for himself, but went on to orchestrate this change to his new life, and take control of it. While he recovered and adjusted to life in a wheelchair he wrote the book "I’m not stupid, just disabled", which is out of print now, but a revised, version based on it is available on Amazon/Kindle.
Mark completes his podcast about Communication Theory.
Mark talks about Communication Theory.
Mark talks about Communication Theory.
Bishop James Long studied for the Roman Catholic Priesthood for 6 years. It was during his years in the seminary that Bishop Long received solid formation; both Academic and Spiritual. Through prayer and discernment, Bishop Long accepted Gods call to become an Independent Catholic Priest. He was ordained a Deacon, Priest and was consecrated a Bishop within the Old Catholic Church. Since he was 5 years old, Bishop Long knew that he wanted to be a priest. However, he knew that he was also called to study Demonology and at the age of 9, he began to study anything he could on the subject. Not only did Bishop Long answer God’s call to serve as a priest but he also answered the call to serve the people of God as the Chief Exorcist of the United States Old Catholic Church. Throughout his education formation, Bishop Long was mentored by a respected and properly formed Exorcist. Bishop Long has performed 26 documented Exorcisms. He has completed a book called, ”Through the Eyes of an Exorcist” and he is the founder of The Paranormal Clergy Institute. The Institute was created to help home-owners and paranormal groups by providing information that will help defend against demonic entities. Currently, he serves as the Presiding Archbishop for the United States Old Catholic Church he holds a Doctorate of Ministry, Masters of Divinity, Masters of Education, Bachelors of Communication Theory, and an Associate of Philosphy. Bishop Long has appeared on; Travel Channel – Ghost Adventures History Channel National Geographic Paranormal Paparazzi TV Guide Coast to Coast Sy Fy Channel He has appeared in 5 documentaries and has completed a book called, Through the eyes of an Exorcist. http://www.paranormalclergy.com/paranormalclergy.com/Welcome.html