NPR's Scott Detrow speaks with Shane Littrell of Cornell University, whose new study concludes that those who buy into corporate jargon may actually be worse at their jobs.
The Autopian on MSN
Ford's next infotainment system could use interior cameras to read your lips and facial expressions if it can't hear you speak
I envy people who can read lips. Being able to see what people are saying, without having to actually hear them, feels like a ...
A new Cornell University study finds that employees who are impressed by corporate jargon score worse on decision-making ...
Control how AI bots access your site, structure content for extraction, and improve your chances of being cited in ...
The Slug Algorithm has been around for a decade now, mostly quietly rendering fonts and later entire GUIs using Bézier curves ...
Background Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is associated with an increased risk of sudden cardiac death (SCD), and ...
Abstract: Imbalanced data remains a challenge in classification research and significantly influences classifier performance. The strategy that is widely used to address this issue is the data-level ...
Objective Postmarketing safety data of avacopan, the first Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved drug in a decade for ...
Background Transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) has increasingly emerged as one of the primary treatments for ...
Just because you have antivirus software installed on your PC doesn't mean a zero-day Trojan can't steal your personal data. The top encryption software keeps you safe from malware (and the NSA). When ...
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