Volume 46, Issue #5 January 2011 The Kinette Club Of Collingwood District One, Zone: Fill & Download for Free

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PDF Editor FAQ

What are the names of some scales for measuring or classifying the progress of civilisations?

A Quality-of-Life index based on Maslow's hierarchy of needs has been proposed; for example see [1]. However, the methods for measuring the fulfilment of each of those individual needs and the method by which the relative importance of those needs is to be weighted, in particular in context of scaling in time and space, have not been defined in a universally acceptable way [2].[1] Michael R. Hagerty, Testing Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs: National Quality-of-Life Across Time, Social Indicators Research,March 1999, Volume 46, Issue 3, pp 249-271http://link.springer.com/article/10.1023%2FA%3A1006921107298#[2] Costanza, Robert, et al. "Quality of life: An approach integrating opportunities, human needs, and subjective well-being." Ecological economics 61.2 (2007): 267-276. Page on pdx.edu

What are some clever tricks or 'hacks' for successful social interaction?

Marvellous or boring? Your shoes will tell me before your mouth does.Photo: REUTERS/Eric GaillardSummaryShow me the shoes you wear most often and I will correctly judge your age, gender, income, political affiliation, emotional and other important personality traits.[1][1][1][1] Well at least research says so.Evidence that it works“Shoes as a source of first impressions” by Omri Gillath, Angela J. Bahns, Fiona Ge and Christian S. Crandall in Journal of Research in Personality, Volume 46, Issue 4 (http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jrp.2012.04.003).You can take a look at some of the masses of the press coverage here.How it was doneResearchers found that a massive 90% of a stranger’s personality can be judged by their shoes alone!Participants provided photographs of their shoes, and during a separate session completed self-report measures.Coders rated the shoes on various dimensions, and these ratings were found to correlate with the owners’ personal characteristics.A new group of participants accurately judged the age, gender, income, and attachment anxiety of shoe owners based solely on the pictures.Shoes can indeed be used to evaluate others, at least in some domains.[2]Some examples of what shoes tell us…Owners who wear masculine or high top shoes tend to be less agreeable.Anxious, clingy people prefer new and well-maintained footwear.People who wear practical shoes tend to be relatively agreeable.People that are calm and emotionally regulated wear shoes that look uncomfortable.Aggressive people tend to wear ankle boots.So…let the games begin and show us your most used pair of shoes.Footnotes[1] Shoes as a source of first impressions[1] Shoes as a source of first impressions[1] Shoes as a source of first impressions[1] Shoes as a source of first impressions[2] Shoes as a source of first impressions

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