Results 201 to 210 of about 34,575 (258)

Leading Toward Sunset or Sunrise? CEO Career Horizon, ESG Performance, Market Leadership, and Underperformance Duration

open access: yesBusiness Strategy and the Environment, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT We examine the effect of chief executive officers' (CEOs') career horizons on environmental, social, and governance (ESG) performance and investigate how hard cues influence this performance effect. Our study offers a new perspective of CEO career horizon as a mechanism that enables firms to improve their ESG performance when occupying a ...
Sofia Angelidou   +2 more
wiley   +1 more source

Vocal Communication in Bird

open access: yesGENGO KENKYU (Journal of the Linguistic Society of Japan), 1956
openaire   +1 more source
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Vocal communication in frogs

Current Opinion in Neurobiology, 2004
The robust nature of vocal communication in frogs has long attracted the attention of natural philosophers and their biologically inclined successors. Each frog species produces distinctive calls that facilitate pre-mating reproductive isolation and thus speciation.
openaire   +2 more sources

Cetacean vocal learning and communication

Current Opinion in Neurobiology, 2014
The cetaceans are one of the few mammalian clades capable of vocal production learning. Evidence for this comes from synchronous changes in song patterns of baleen whales and experimental work on toothed whales in captivity. While baleen whales like many vocal learners use this skill in song displays that are involved in sexual selection, toothed ...
openaire   +2 more sources

Vocalic communication in persuasion

Quarterly Journal of Speech, 1972
Previous studies demonstrated that credibility is inferred from vocalic communication. These studies, however, may not be generalizable and have not shown vocal cues to affect persuasion. The present study utilized recordings of a speech delivered by the same speaker in two styles (conversational and dynamic).
W. Barnett Pearce, Bernard J. Brommel
openaire   +1 more source

Vocal communication and the triune brain

Physiology & Behavior, 2003
This paper tests the 'fit' between Paul MacLean's triune brain scheme of brain organization and existing knowledge about the pathways mediating vocal communication in mammals. One component of MacLean's limbic system ('paleomammalian brain'), the 'thalamocingulate circuit,' is found to have an important role in expression of vocalizations, particularly
openaire   +2 more sources

Animal Vocal Communication

1998
This book will be a landmark text for all those interested in animal communication. Animal Vocal Communication explicitly avoids human-centred concepts and approaches and links communication to fundamental biological processes instead. It offers a conceptual framework - assessment/management - that allows us to integrate detailed studies of ...
Donald H. Owings, Eugene S. Morton
openaire   +1 more source

Chelonian Vocal Communication

2013
Recently it was discovered that freshwater turtles communicate underwater by sound. The vocal repertoire of the Western Australian longneck turtle Chelodina colliei includes complex and percussive calls which are harmonically structured and frequency modulated, with dominant frequencies below 1 kHz and a range from around 100 to 3.5 kHz.
Ferrara, Camila Rudge   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Precise auditory–vocal mirroring in neurons for learned vocal communication

Nature, 2008
Brain mechanisms for communication must establish a correspondence between sensory and motor codes used to represent the signal. One idea is that this correspondence is established at the level of single neurons that are active when the individual performs a particular gesture or observes a similar gesture performed by another individual.
J F, Prather   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Vocal communication snorkel

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1996
A vocal communication snorkel includes a hollow body having a breather tube, adapted to extend above the water, coupled thereto and a mouthpiece adapted to be held by the lips of a snorkeler. The body has a pair of inwardly curved, spherically shaped diaphragms of thin plastic material that are tuned to resonance within the frequency band of 1500 to ...
openaire   +1 more source

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