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This week we're going to try something a little different on the show. We've been mentioning in the past few weeks that we several of the hosts and our most… The post e209. PCA2022 Conference Paper Workshop & Preview appeared first on The VoxPopcast.
They dominate the doctor's office waiting room, the bus ride home, any spare few minutes in our lives that we want to fill with something low-effort and mindless. What are they? Mobile games like Candy Crush Saga and other mindless match-three timesucks. Listen now to learn about how these games are engineered to hack into your brain to make them easy to get into, satisfying to play, and impossible to put down. If you have any comments, questions, concerns, queries, or complaints, please email me at NeuroscienceAmateurHour@gmail.com or DM me at @NeuroscienceAmateurHour on Instagram. Citations and relevant papers below: Dockterman, E., Candy Crush Saga: The Science Behind our Addiction, TIME, November 13, 2013Fruhlinger, J., Candy Crush Addiction is Real - and Can Lead to Destructive Results, Observer, (2019). Soroush, M., Hancock, M., Bohns, VK., Self-Control in Casual Games: The Relationship between Candy Crush Saga (™) players in-app purchases and self-control. IEEE Games Media Entertainment, Conference Paper (2014). Larche, C., Musielak, N., Dixon, M., The Candy Crush Sweet Tooth: How “Near-misses' in Candy Crush Increases Frustration, and the Urge to Continue Gameplay, Journal of Gambling Studies (2016). Madigan, J., Why You Don't Burn out on Candy Crush Saga, Psychology of Video Games (2013). Perez-Truglia, R., On the causes and consequences of hedonic adaptation, Journal of Economic Psychology, Volume 33, Issue 6 (2012). Camgoz, N., Yener, C., Guvenc, D., Effects of hue, saturation, and brightness: Part 2: Attention. Color Research and Application, Volume 29, Issue 1 (2003). Madore, J., Wagner, A., Multicosts of Multitasking, Cerebrum, (2019).Duverge, G., Insert More Coins: The Psychology Behind Microtransactions, Touro University Worldwide (2016).Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/neuroscienceamateurhour)
In today's episode of the podcast, we are showing you Michaela's presentation at the 2019 New Historians Conference at Victoria University of Wellington earlier this year. This embodies Michaela's MA research on Gregory of Tours and Orosius of Braga, particularly how they used the biblical origin myth in their Chronicles. This can be used in conjunction with our latest blog post where we give you tips and tricks for writing your first conference paper! If you have any questions, make sure to get in touch! www.tahuhukorero.com Music by: Makeshift Locale.
In this episode, I answer some more questions sent in by listeners. These questions relate to: How to deal with feelings of resentment and hostility when the father of your kids has another child with a new partner and then they also separate but your ex treats the new child better, or differently than your kids you have with him. Is it unreasonable to know when the father of your children gets engaged? How does one co-parent after betrayal and manage visiting schedules if the parents live in different states and the child is a baby? Links mentioned in the episode: Parenting arrangements for the 0 - 4 year age group Conference Paper by Federal Magistrate Robyn Sexton. Helpful blog posts THREE COMMON CO-PARENTING STYLES. 5 TIPS TO DEAL WITH A DIFFICULT EX-PARTNER. Sign up to the next FREE 30 Day Get Your Sparkle Back Challenge HERE. To contact Julia, email: julia@singlemothersurvivalguide.com. Visit us at Single Mother Survival Guide. Or connect with Single Mother Survival Guide on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, or Pinterest.
QualityHeroes - der Podcast über Softwarequalität für agile Köpfe
Freunde der Qualität, wir begrüßen Euch zu unserer 4. Ausgabe! Ron tauscht sich mit seinem Gast Nils Röttger von der imbus AG zum „Internet of Things“ aus und was es für das Testen bedeutet - viel Spaß damit! Sprecher: Ron Werner: https://www.xing.com/profile/Ron_Werner Twitter: https://twitter.com/ron_werner Nils Röttger: https://www.xing.com/profile/Nils_Roettger Twitter: https://twitter.com/NilsRoettger Ressourcen online: AIoTi https://aioti.eu/aioti-wg03-reports-on-iot-standards/ Web of Things https://www.w3.org/WoT/ Extra 3 Smart Home https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yZn0r4ik0fI ASQF CP IoT https://www.asqf.de/asqf/zertifizierungen/asqf-certified-professional-for-iot-cpiot/ Conference Paper mit "Der einfache Usability Test für Mobile und IoT" https://2018.software-quality-days.com/conferences/2018/Documents/SWQD2018_ConferenceJournal.pdf Patrick Franke, Fast-Track-IoT http://spectronet.de/story_docs/vortraege_2017/170927_sensorik_symposium/170927_03_franke_nxtgn.pdf Non-profit IoT Projekt "Rainforest Connection": https://rfcx.org/ Über QualityMinds: www.qualityminds.de https://twitter.com/qualitymindsde Feedback & Themenwünsche an: ron.werner@qualityminds.de christian.brandes@qualityminds.de
This special episode features a panel of scholars from the Argumentation, Justification, and Proof working group at the PMENA conference in Tucson, AZ. Featured are Eric Knuth from the University of Wisconsin, Orit Zaslavsky from New York University, and David Yopp from the University of Idaho. 2016 Conference Paper (via ResearchGate) 2016 White Paper (via ResearchGate) 2015 Conference paper (via ResearchGate) 2015 Podcast Recording of the Panel 2015 Podcast Recording of Keith Weber's Remarks See comments for references mentioned during the episode Mizzou Online Degrees in Mathematics Education
Two months after the show, here's a follow-up episode, in which you can hear a recording of a conference paper I gave at the University of Kent on 14 January.
©2012 Mark DeKay.