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Tom Metcalf Promoted to President, Acute and Brian LaDuke Joins Sarnova as President, Emergency Preparedness
DUBLIN, Ohio – Sarnova Inc., parent company to four fast-growing business units: Bound Tree Medical, Cardio Partners, Emergency Medical Products and Tri-anim Health Services, announced today the creation of two major leadership roles at the company. Tom Metcalf has been promoted to the new position of President, Acute, from his previous role as Senior Vice President of Acute & EMS Sales. Tom will be responsible for managing the leaders of Tri-anim Health Services’ sales, health systems, sales operations and product management teams and will assume full P&L responsibility for Sarnova’s Acute business. Througho...
Source: JEMS Administration and Leadership - October 25, 2017 Category: Emergency Medicine Authors: Sarnova Tags: Administration and Leadership Industry News Source Type: news

The algorithm method: how internet dating became everyone's route to a perfect love match
Six million Britons are looking for their perfect partner online before Valentine's day on Friday, but their chance of success may depend on clever maths rather than charismaIn the Summer of 2012, Chris McKinlay was finishing his maths dissertation at the University of California in Los Angeles. It meant a lot of late nights as he ran complex calculations through a powerful supercomputer in the early hours of the morning, when computing time was cheap. While his work hummed away, he whiled away time on online dating sites, but he didn't have a lot of luck – until one night, when he noted a connection between the two acti...
Source: Guardian Unlimited Science - February 9, 2014 Category: Science Authors: Nicola Davis, James Bridle Tags: Psychology Valentine's Day Online dating Biology Smartphones Technology Features Mobile phones Life and style Internet The Observer Chemistry Science Source Type: news

IJERPH, Vol. 18, Pages 6094: Will E-Cigarette Modified Risk Messages with a Nicotine Warning Polarize Smokers ’ Beliefs about the Efficacy of Switching Completely to E-Cigarettes in Reducing Smoking-Related Risks?
This study examined if exposure to e-cigarette MRMs with a nicotine warning polarizes smokers’ initially opposing beliefs about the efficacy of switching completely to e-cigarettes in reducing smoking-related risks, and if this polarization depends on individuals’ need for closure. An online experiment randomized 761 U.S. adult smokers to either three MRMs with a nicotine warning or three control messages. People reported their perceived efficacy of switching completely to e-cigarettes at pre- and posttest and need for closure at pretest. Linear regression showed no polarization effects. Nonetheless, need for closure a...
Source: International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health - June 5, 2021 Category: Environmental Health Authors: Bo Yang Juliana L. Barbati Yunjin Choi Tags: Article Source Type: research

U.S. adults' addiction and harm beliefs about nicotine and low nicotine cigarettes
Publication date: Available online 27 December 2016 Source:Preventive Medicine Author(s): Erin Keely O'Brien, Anh B. Nguyen, Alexander Persoskie, Allison C. Hoffman This research described U.S. adults' beliefs about nicotine and low nicotine cigarettes (LNCs) using the nationally-representative Health Information National Trends Survey (HINTS-FDA 2015; N =3738). About three quarters of people either were unsure of the relationship between nicotine and cancer or incorrectly believed that nicotine causes cancer. People who were non-White, less educated, age 65+, and never established smokers were most likely to be unaware t...
Source: Preventive Medicine - December 26, 2016 Category: Global & Universal Source Type: research

Using Online Comments to Explore Consumer Beliefs Regarding Organic Food in German-Speaking Countries and the United States
Publication date: Available online 17 February 2020Source: Food Quality and PreferenceAuthor(s): Hannah Danner, Luisa MenapaceAbstractConsumer beliefs play an important role in explaining consumer behavior. This exploratory study aims at building an inventory of consumer beliefs about organic food. To reach this objective, we conducted a content analysis of online comments about organic food posted on news websites and forums in German-speaking countries (n=1,094) and the United States (n=1,069). Such user-generated content has emerged as an abundant source of insight for consumer research, although very little has been ex...
Source: Food Quality and Preference - February 17, 2020 Category: Food Science Source Type: research

What shapes civilian beliefs about violent events? Experimental evidence from Pakistan - Silverman D.
Why do civilians in warzones often hold widely divergent beliefs about what is happening in the fighting? While there is a burgeoning literature on the micro-dynamics of armed conflict, variation in civilians' factual beliefs has received scant attention. ...
Source: SafetyLit - July 11, 2019 Category: International Medicine & Public Health Tags: Media, Marketing, and Internet Issues Source Type: news

The effects of direct-to-consumer-advertising on mental illness beliefs and stigma - Brown SA.
Despite widespread use, little is known about how video direct-to-consumer-advertising (DTCA) influences beliefs about or stigma towards mental illness. The purpose of this study was to examine the effects of a medication advertisement on beliefs and stigm...
Source: SafetyLit - March 14, 2017 Category: Global & Universal Tags: Media, Marketing, and Internet Issues Source Type: news

Psychologists update their beliefs about effect sizes after replication studies - McDiarmid AD, Tullett AM, Whitt CM, Vazire S, Smaldino PE, Stephens JE.
We examined belief updating in action by tracking...
Source: SafetyLit - November 25, 2021 Category: International Medicine & Public Health Tags: Media, Marketing, and Internet Issues Source Type: news

Up-dating: ratings of perceived dating success are better online than offline - Fullwood C, Attrill-Smith A.
The primary aims of this study were to test whether perceived dating success would differ between offline and online zero-acquaintance dating contexts and to investigate the role that self-esteem might play in these evaluations. Participants were presented...
Source: SafetyLit - July 1, 2017 Category: International Medicine & Public Health Tags: Media, Marketing, and Internet Issues Source Type: news

Green Consumption Behavior Antecedents: Environmental Concern, Knowledge, and Beliefs
ABSTRACT The present study adds to the evolving literature on green consumer behavior by examining through statistically robust methods the effect and interrelationships of the key constructs of environmental concern, consumer environmental knowledge, beliefs about biofuels, and behavioral intention (i.e., willingness to use and pay) in the context of biofuels. Data were collected through a survey of 1695 respondents. Hypotheses are based on a literature review and a pilot study, and the conceptual structural model developed is tested through structural equation modeling. Results show that concern for the environment has a...
Source: Psychology and Marketing - April 10, 2014 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Anastasios Pagiaslis, Athanasios Krystallis Krontalis Tags: Research Article Source Type: research

Mindless eating: is there something rotten behind the research?
A storm of retractions, corrections, data irregularities and controversy over duplicate publication are destroying the credibility of Cornell ’s Food and Brand Lab. It’s time for the university to be open about what’s going onMost people probably haven ’t heard of the beleaguered marketing professor, Brian Wansink, but chances are many will know about his work. Wansink is the mind behind the concept of “mindless eating” – the idea that the unconscious decisions we make about food can have profound effects on our diet and weight. Ideas like using smaller plates to eat fewer calories are pretty much engrained i...
Source: Guardian Unlimited Science - February 16, 2018 Category: Science Authors: Pete Etchells and Chris Chambers Tags: Science Psychology Controversies Peer review and scientific publishing Source Type: news

A Name You Can Trust? Personification Effects Are Influenced by Beliefs About Company Values
ABSTRACT Are consumers more likely to trust a product when it is branded with a human name rather than a nonhuman name? While the extant literature on brand personification reveals a positivity bias for personified products, other research suggests that many contemporary consumers harbor underlying feelings of mistrust toward companies more generally. The present research was the first empirical research to date to investigate the moderating role of consumers’ beliefs toward company values on brand trust judgments for human‐named and nonhuman‐named products. The results showed that although consumers significantly tr...
Source: Psychology and Marketing - December 20, 2013 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Kendall J. Eskine, William H. Locander Tags: Research Article Source Type: research

Do beliefs about gender roles moderate the relationship between exposure to misogynistic song lyrics and men's female-directed aggression? - Hyatt CS, Berke DS, Miller JD, Zeichner A.
Although independent lines of research have identified misogynistic lyrical content and traditional gender role beliefs as reliable predictors of men's female-directed aggression, more research is needed to understand the extent to which these variables ma...
Source: SafetyLit - August 19, 2016 Category: Global & Universal Tags: Media, Marketing, and Internet Issues Source Type: news

IJERPH, Vol. 19, Pages 2592: Choice, Motives, and Mixed Messages: A Qualitative Photo-Based Inquiry of Parents & rsquo; Perceptions of Food and Beverage Marketing to Children in Sport and Recreation Facilities
IJERPH, Vol. 19, Pages 2592: Choice, Motives, and Mixed Messages: A Qualitative Photo-Based Inquiry of Parents’ Perceptions of Food and Beverage Marketing to Children in Sport and Recreation Facilities International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health doi: 10.3390/ijerph19052592 Authors: Rachel Prowse Kate Storey Dana Lee Olstad Valerie Carson Kim D. Raine Unhealthy food and beverage availability and sponsorship undermine healthy food practices in sport and recreation. We conducted a focused ethnography with reflexive photo-interviewing to examine parents’ awareness, ...
Source: International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health - February 23, 2022 Category: Environmental Health Authors: Rachel Prowse Kate Storey Dana Lee Olstad Valerie Carson Kim D. Raine Tags: Article Source Type: research