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How Hygiene Is Different in Space

What's different about hygiene in space? Former NASA astronaut Mike Massimino breaks down all the differences between using the bathroom, washing your hair, and brushing your teeth on Earth and in space. How do you take showers in space? Do you get a private bathroom on the International Space Station? Can you bring your own toothbrush into space? Mike Massimino is a former NASA astronaut, senior advisor for space programs at the Intrepid Museum, and professor at Columbia University.




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How This Artist Collapses Dimensions

Artist Alexa Meade paints on people to make them look like paintings of people. She's developed a style that flattens 3 dimensional objects into what at first appears to be a 2D image. See more at https://alexameade.com




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Scientist Explains How to Study the Metabolism of Ultra High Flying Geese

Bar-headed geese are the SR-71's of the avian world, soaring to 26,000 feet. To learn how their bodies function so well at altitude researchers raised a gaggle of geese, introduced them to a wind tunnel, strapped tiny masks to their beaks and sensor packs on their backs.




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How Cars Got 99% Cleaner in 50 Years | WIRED Brand Lab

BRANDED CONTENT | Produced by WIRED Brand Lab for API | Innovations in fuel and engine technology have helped reduce emission pollutants since 1970 — despite more people driving more miles every year. Here's how.




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Accent Expert Explains How to Tell Accents Apart

Have you ever had a hard time telling the difference between an Aussie and a Kiwi accent? Dialect coach Erik Singer breaks down the subtle differences between a few commonly confused regional accents. What actually makes a New York and Boston accent different? What's the main differentiator between a northern and southern English accent?




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How To Design A Resilient City For The Future | WIRED Brand Lab

BRANDED CONTENT | Produced by WIRED Brand Lab with American Institute of Architects | How can architectural design save cities and prepare us for the future under the threat of climate change? AIA architects in Boston discuss how they are working with community leaders and scientists to build more resilient cities.




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How FIDO helps working dogs communicate with their owners

Melody Jackson, director of Georgia Tech’s Animal-Computer Interaction Lab and director of the Facilitating Interactions for Dogs with Occupations project (FIDO), explains how the tech works.




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How Ad Astra Created the Moon

Jedediah Smith, VFX Supervisor for Method Studios, describes the painstaking process visual effects artists used to create the moon and lunar rover sequence in Ad Astra. From their innovative use of infrared cameras to their deep archival research to their extensive use of rotoscoping, the effects team employed an array of techniques to balance realism and accuracy.




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How the Two-Hour Marathon Limit Was Broken

On Saturday, October 12, 2019, Eliud Kipchoge became the first person ever to run a marathon in under two hours, a staggering achievement in athletics and human performance. Dr. Michael Joyner, an exercise physiologist at the Mayo Clinic, first predicted it might be possible in a paper he wrote in 1991. WIRED's Robbie Gonzalez has been following Kipchoge's attempts for years, and spoke with Joyner about how Kipchoge finally made it happen.




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How Health Is Different in Space

What's different about our health in space? Former NASA astronaut Mike Massimino breaks down all the differences between how we take care of ourselves on Earth and in space. What happens to your body if you don't work out? What do you do if you need to vomit? What happens to your bones when you get back to Earth? Mike Massimino is a former NASA astronaut, senior advisor for space programs at the Intrepid Museum, and professor at Columbia University.




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Obsessed - How This Guy Made the World's Hottest Peppers

PuckerButt Pepper Company founder Ed Currie is on a mission to create the world's hottest peppers. Ed is the evil genius who brought the world the Carolina Reaper, one of the hottest hot peppers in existence; but he's not stopping there.




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How Cloud Computing Could Improve Your Quality Of Life | WIRED Brand Lab

BRANDED CONTENT | Produced by WIRED Brand Lab with Comcast Business | While balance looks different for everyone, the common thread is more flexible time on employees’ own terms. Cloud computing may be the modern work/life balance solution and could significantly improve your quality of life.




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WIRED Tradecraft - FBI Agent Explains How Bombs Are Disposed Of

John Stewart, FBI agent and unit chief at the Hazardous Devices School, breaks down how bomb units in the police and military dispose of improvised explosive devices (IED) and other forms of ordnance. John explores the various disposal techniques used in the field, and explains how they keep themselves safe while investigating suspicious packages.




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Mycologist Explains How a Slime Mold Can Solve Mazes

Physarum polycephalum is a single-celled, brainless organism that can make “decisions,” and solve mazes. Anne Pringle, who is a mycologist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, explains everything you need to know about what these slime molds are and how they fit into our ecosystem.




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Colour : how we see it and how we use it / Michael Mark Woolfson (University of York, UK)

Woolfson, Michael M. (Michael Mark), author




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Statistical thermodynamics for beginners / Howard D Stidham, University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA

Stidham, Howard D., author




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How Parties Experience Mediation [electronic resource] : An Interview Study on Relationship Changes in Workplace Mediation / by Timea Tallodi

Tallodi, Timea, author




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Not everyone gets a trophy [electronic resource] : how to manage the millenials / Bruce Tulgan

Tulgan, Bruce, author




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Start with why : how great leaders inspire everyone to take action / Simon Sinek

Sinek, Simon, author




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Deal with difficult people [electronic resource] : how to cope with tricky situations in the workplace




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The drama-free workplace [electronic resource] : how you can prevent unconscious bias, sexual harassment, ethics lapses, and inspire a healthy culture / Patti Perez

Perez, Patti, 1967- author




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The engaged caregiver [electronic resource] : how to build a performance-driven workforce to reduce burnout and transform care / edited by Joseph Cabral, James Merlino, MD, and Martin Wright




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Engaging the hearts and minds of all your employees [electronic resource] : how to ignite passionate performance for better business results / Lee J. Colan

Colan, Lee J. (Lee Joseph)




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Erasing institutional bias [electronic resource] : how to create systemic change for organizational inclusion / Tiffany Jana, and Ashley Diaz Mejias

Jana, Tiffany, author




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The exchange strategy for managing conflict in health care [electronic resource] : how to defuse emotions and create solutions when the stakes are high / Steven P. Dinkin, Barbara Filner, Lisa Maxwell

Dinkin, Steven




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The extra mile [electronic resource] : how to engage your people to win / David MacLeod and Chris Brady

MacLeod, David




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Feedback that works [electronic resource] : how to build and deliver your message




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How to be an inclusive leader [electronic resource] : your role in creating cultures of belonging where everyone can thrive / Jennifer Brown

Personal name Brown, Jenny, 1971- author




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How to have the best employees (collection) [electronic resource] / David Sirota, Douglas A. Klein, David Russo

Sirota, David, author




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Inbound organization [electronic resource] : how to build and strengthen your company's future using inbound principles / Dan Tyre, Todd Hockenberry

Tyre, Dan, 1958- author




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Leading with emotional courage [electronic resource] : how to have hard conversations, create accountability, and inspire action on your most important work / Peter Bregman

Bregman, Peter, author




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Learning how to delegate as a leader [electronic resource] / Esther Schindler

Schindler, Esther, 1958- author




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The power of people [electronic resource] : learn how successful organizations use workforce analytics to improve business performance / Nigel Guenole, Jonathan Ferrar, Sheri Feinzig

Guenole, Nigel, author




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Fundamental statistics for the social and behavioral sciences / Howard T. Tokunaga

Tokunaga, Howard, author




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Fundamental statistics for the behavioral sciences / David C. Howell

Howell, David C., author




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Reason & rigor : how conceptual frameworks guide research / Sharon M. Ravitch, Matthew Riggan

Ravitch, Sharon M., author




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Statistical inference as severe testing : how to get beyond the statistics wars / Deborah G. Mayo (Virginia Tech)

Mayo, Deborah G., author




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Let the children play : how more play will save our schools and help children thrive / Pasi Sahlberg and William Doyle ; foreword by Sir Ken Robinson

Sahlberg, Pasi, author




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Talking from 9 to 5 : how women's and men's conversational styles affect who gets heard, who gets credit, and what gets done at work / Deborah Tannen

Tannen, Deborah




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The principle / Jérôme Ferrari ; translated from the French by Howard Curtis

Hayden Library - PQ2706.E764 P7413 2017




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The carousel of desire / Éric-Emmanuel Schmitt ; translated from the French by Howard Curtis and Katherine Gregor

Hayden Library - PQ2679.C37844 P4713 2016




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One toss of the dice: the incredible story of how a poem made us modern / R. Howard Bloch ; translation of "Un coup de dés jamais n'abolira le hasard" by J.D. McClatchy

Hayden Library - PQ2344.C63 B57 2017




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The pen and the brush: how passion for art shaped nineteenth-century French novels / Anka Muhlstein ; translated from the French by Adriana Hunter

Hayden Library - PQ653.M8413 2017




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A new history of French literature / edited by Denis Hollier ; with R. Howard Bloch [and 7 others]

Online Resource




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How Learning Collaboratives Can Help Address Today’s Pressing Policy Challenges

Researchers and policymakers across a number of fields have long understood the power of peer-to-peer learning.




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Exclusionary Discipline Is “Free”: How Federal Policymakers Can Promote Positive Approaches to School Discipline

The topic of exclusionary discipline is not only of professional interest to me—it’s personal. Helping my son navigate the middle grades was taxing. He attended a school that suspended him for defending himself when a classmate broke his iPad and then punched him during recess to instigate a fight.




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How Can We Help Workers with Medical Conditions Stay Employed?

In this episode of On the Evidence, University of Rhode Island's Annette Bourbonniere, Webility Corporation's Jennifer Christian, and Mathematica's Yonatan Ben-Shalom discuss research on workers who miss work because of an injury or illness and how to help them remain in the labor force.




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Are Schools Creating Engaged Citizens? How Would We Know?

In the 21st century, the civic purpose of public education is often overlooked in debates that tend to focus on education’s economic effects. But the civic purpose is arguably more important than it has ever been.




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During Challenging Times, How Can Schools Learn From Each Other?

The field of education evolves constantly and is now changing rapidly because of COVID-19. In the face of this pandemic, we continue to refine our practices.




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How to talk about videogames / Ian Bogost

Hayden Library - GV1469.3.B62 2015