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Why using a brand nickname in marketing is not a good idea

Researchers from Western University, Stockton University, and University of Massachusetts Amherst have published a new study that examines whether firms benefit from adopting popular nicknames in their branding efforts.

Study questions link between cooperation and societal benefits

Until now, it was considered certain that people are more likely to cooperate if the benefits from cooperation are higher. A recently published, large-scale study involving researchers from Innsbruck has now called this finding ...

No time for a holiday? A 'workation' could be the answer

Imagine this: you're lounging on the beach, waves crashing in the background. A laptop sits on the table next to your iced coffee. In between meetings, you dip into the ocean or explore a hiking trail. This is the ideal vision ...

Singapore families show high resilience during pandemic

A recent study by the National University of Singapore Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine (NUS Medicine) analyzing the resilience of Singaporean families during the COVID-19 pandemic has uncovered significant findings that highlight ...

Brands' dark side: FOMO spurs obsession, compulsive buys

Ever scrolled through Instagram or TikTok and felt a sudden rush to buy something before it's gone? You're not alone. A new study published in the Journal of Business Research, investigates how a "fear of missing out" (FOMO) ...

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Economics & Business
How celebrity CEOs affect risk-taking behavior for restaurant businesses
Economics & Business
Researchers propose a new paradigm for economic performance and sustainability
Economics & Business
How passion drives or derails team innovation
Economics & Business
Experienced and powerful boards are needed to harness the power of overconfident CEOs for innovations
Economics & Business
Combating promotion and tenure bias against Black and Hispanic faculty
Social Sciences
As Yelp turns 20, online reviews continue to confound and confuse shoppers
Economics & Business
Study: Job embeddedness impacts voluntary turnover in the midst of job insecurity
Economics & Business
There's a renewed push to scrap junior rates of pay for young adults. Do we need to rethink what's fair?
Economics & Business
Consumers' support for trade and immigration declines, small change on higher taxes for wealthy
Economics & Business
Economists recognized early on in the pandemic that working from home is here to stay
Social Sciences
Move over, heartfelt chats, it's the gift that counts
Economics & Business
Investigating 'purist' organizations motivations—can they survive in a world of compromise?
Economics & Business
To really be greener, businesses need to look to the boardroom
Economics & Business
Community sports need provincial 'assist' to thrive, says report
Economics & Business
Return-to-office mandates may not be the solution to downtown struggles that Canadian cities are banking on
Social Sciences
Loyalty influences support for indirect ties in moral dilemmas, study finds
Economics & Business
Study highlights managers' role in telework success
Economics & Business
Do customers perceive AI-written communications as less authentic?
Social Sciences
Networking doesn't have to be a chore. Here are three ways to make it more enjoyable and effective
Social Sciences
Seven years on, study reveals #MeToo's unexpected impact on consumer behavior

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Materials Science
Inspired by Spider-Man, researchers recreate web-slinging technology
Cell & Microbiology
Lighting the way with accurate and safe 3D embryo imaging
Cell & Microbiology
Biomolecular condensates can split membranes without the aid of proteins, study finds
General Physics
Scientists accelerate uranium beam with record power
Biochemistry
Barnacle-inspired polymers could present new way to design antibiotics, researchers say
General Physics
Researchers discover new isotope plutonium-227
Astronomy
A sharper view of the Milky Way with Gaia and machine learning
Condensed Matter
Theoretical study demonstrates existence of giant photocaloric effects in ferroelectric perovskites
Molecular & Computational biology
Genetic mechanism unlocks a key secret behind disease infection in crops
Social Sciences
Carefully exposing children to more misinformation can make them better fact-checkers, study suggests
Plants & Animals
Researchers find dragonfly species with darker wings have evolved to withstand heat and attract partners
Mathematics
In double breakthrough, mathematician helps solve two long-standing problems
Planetary Sciences
Jupiter's Great Red Spot shows unexpected size changes
Paleontology & Fossils
Scientists recreate the head of this ancient 9-foot-long bug
Archaeology
Fossils and fires: Insights into early modern human activity in the jungles of Southeast Asia
Astronomy
Black hole destroys star, goes after another
Archaeology
Underwater caves yield clues that may help explain early expansion of Homo sapiens into Mediterranean islands
Plants & Animals
Scientists study elephant wrinkles to understand their purpose
Optics & Photonics
Quantum physicists tap into entanglement to improve the precision of optical atomic clocks
Earth Sciences
Snowflake dance analysis could improve rain forecasts

Having a bad boss makes you a worse employee, study finds

If your boss stomps and yells, criticizes you, and then proceeds to take the credit for your work—even it is an isolated incident—it can take a profound toll on employee well-being and performance. But despite the many ...

Digitizing books can spur demand for physical copies

Book publishers cried foul—in the form of numerous legal challenges—nearly two decades ago when the Google Books project digitized and freely distributed more than 25 million works.

Online grocery baskets less varied than in-store carts

Online grocery carts tend to include less variety and fewer fruits and vegetables than those in a trip to a brick-and-mortar supermarket—but online shoppers are less susceptible to unhealthy impulse buys, a new Cornell ...