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Books > Social sciences > Psychology
Organizations have traditionally focused on competitive advantage
strategies to improve their companies. However, new research points
to the evaluation of employees' thoughts and emotions in the
workplace in order to help shape organizational culture in a way
that could react, adapt, and evolve to external changes with speed
and efficiency. Emotion-Based Approaches to Personnel Management:
Emerging Research and Opportunities provides conceptual frameworks,
analysis, and discussion of the issues concerning organizational
behavior through the lens of organizational culture and emotions.
The content within this publication examines diversity, consumer
behavior, and emotional intelligence and is designed for managers,
human resources officers, business professionals, academicians,
students, and researchers.
This book explores elements of team dynamics and interactions that
block or enable effective ideation. The author investigates
interpersonal dynamics, inhibitors of collaboration and boosters of
ideation efficiency that govern the ability of a team to generate
new and valuable ideas. Where it is widely accepted that teams are
a necessity in the creative process, this book highlights the
inconsistency in terms of quality and reliability of creative
output when looking at teams. Why do some teams struggle, and
others succeed in innovating? This book offers a valuable resource
for those interested in the qualities and interventions that can
impact the ideation potential of a team.
The second edition of Neuroscience for Counselors and Therapists:
Integrating the Sciences of the Mind and Brain presents students
with an accessible, insightful discussion of the virtues and vices
of integrating neuroscience into existing models of counseling
practice. The text boasts an emphasis on practical application,
helping readers better understand the relationship between
particular theories and neuroscience, then offering guidance as to
how they can incorporate this knowledge into personal practice. The
book begins with an introduction to neuroscience and a chapter
dedicated to exploring the structure and function of the brain. The
four major theoretical paradigms are discussed in individual
chapters, integrating neuroscience into each and demonstrating this
integration through a client vignette. Four prominent disorders
that appear frequently in therapy are covered in a comparative,
integrative way across the four treatment paradigms. For the second
edition, all references have been updated to reflect cutting-edge
research within the discipline. Additionally, newly developed
Cultural Considerations sections, which appear in each chapter,
help students identify the challenges of integration as they relate
to diverse populations and individual cultural experiences.
Neuroscience for Counselors and Therapists is an innovative yet
reader-friendly text that is well suited for courses in counseling
and psychotherapy.
Knowledge and Vision, Volume 70, the latest release in the
Psychology of Learning and Motivation, features empirical and
theoretical contributions in cognitive and experimental psychology,
ranging from classical and instrumental conditioning, to complex
learning and problem-solving. Topics in this new release include
Memorability: How what we see influences what we remember, The
impact of prior knowledge on visual memory, Neural dynamics of
visual and semantic object processing, Comprehending and developing
the meaning of visual narratives, Attention and vision, The role of
learning and memory in early visual development, The Information
Content of Visual Categories, What do neurons really want?, and
more.
The Clinician's Guide to Geriatric Forensic Evaluations provides
practical guidance to clinicians performing forensic evaluations on
older adults. The book begins with how geriatric forensic
evaluations differ from those done on non-geriatric adults. DSM-5
criteria for neurocognitive disorders are discussed and
differentiated from the previous criteria in DSM-IV. Coverage
includes assessing decision-making capacity/competence and
evaluating undue influence, elder abuse, and financial
exploitation. Each chapter opens with a case study and then
highlights specific assessment techniques, best practices, and
common pitfalls to avoid. The book additionally covers forensic
report writing, court testimony, and when to refer to an outside
independent expert. Samples of geriatric forensic reports are
provided.
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Oedipus Redeemed
(Hardcover)
Kalman J. Kaplan; Foreword by Matthew B. Schwartz
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R758
R662
Discovery Miles 6 620
Save R96 (13%)
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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The fifth volume in the Mathematical Cognition and Learning series
focuses on informal learning environments and other parental
influences on numerical cognitive development and formal
instructional interventions for improving mathematics learning and
performance. The chapters cover the use of numerical play and games
for improving foundational number knowledge as well as school math
performance, the link between early math abilities and the
approximate number system, and how families can help improve the
early development of math skills. The book goes on to examine
learning trajectories in early mathematics, the role of
mathematical language in acquiring numeracy skills, evidence-based
assessments of early math skills, approaches for intensifying early
mathematics interventions, the use of analogies in mathematics
instruction, schema-based diagrams for teaching ratios and
proportions, the role of cognitive processes in treating
mathematical learning difficulties, and addresses issues associated
with intervention fadeout.
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