Vaidya Balendu Prakash was born in 1959 in Meerut, India. He completed his BAMS degree and learned applied aspects of Ayurvedic medicine from his father. In 1989, he established the Vaidya Chandra Prakash Cancer Research Foundation in Dehradun to conduct Ayurvedic research. Since 1985, he has maintained a private Ayurvedic practice while holding numerous positions advising the Indian government on Ayurvedic issues and research. He has authored several peer-reviewed publications on using Ayurvedic treatments for conditions like anemia, migraine, and leukemia.
Vaidya Balendu Prakash was born in 1959 in Meerut, India. He completed his BAMS degree and learned applied aspects of Ayurvedic medicine from his father. In 1989, he established the Vaidya Chandra Prakash Cancer Research Foundation in Dehradun to conduct Ayurvedic research. Since 1985, he has maintained a private Ayurvedic practice while holding numerous positions advising the Indian government on Ayurvedic issues and research. He has authored several peer-reviewed publications on using Ayurvedic treatments for conditions like anemia, migraine, and leukemia.
The document provides information from the CDC on preventing the flu. It recommends getting sufficient sleep, exercising regularly, staying hydrated by drinking water and avoiding sugar, reducing stress, washing hands often, and eating fruits and vegetables. These everyday steps can help strengthen the immune system and reduce the chances of contracting the flu or spreading it to others.
To post a final presentation on SlideShare, create an account with a username and password on the site. Upload the presentation file by clicking upload, selecting the file, and entering the title and names of team members. Save the presentation and copy the URL of the presentation page. Email the URL to instructors to share the final presentation.
This is a slide deck that Laura Jones and her team ran as a video (with a CD in a boombox for soundtrack) in Jennifer Aaker's 2008 Building Innovative Brands class.
- The document discusses various studies and readings on measuring happiness. It explores how happiness is heterogenous and influenced by demographics, psychographics and culture.
- Key findings include that experiences produce longer-lasting satisfaction than material purchases; thinking about time rather than money increases social behaviors linked to happiness; average global happiness is above neutral but wealthier countries are not necessarily happier; and income correlates with life evaluations but feelings depend more on social factors.
- Happiness is subjective and difficult to measure, but large sample sizes can overcome flaws by averaging out responses while first-hand, real-time reports are the least flawed despite still being imperfect.
Designing Happiness is a class taught at the Stanford Graduate School of Business. The class explores the data-driven research on happiness, revealing insights about how to (a) rethink, (b) quantify, (c) visualize, (d) deliver, and (e) build happiness.
On Oct 10, 2010 Tony Hsieh spoke to the Designing Happiness class at the Stanford Graduate School of Business about how he delivers happiness at Zappos.
The document provides information from the CDC on preventing the flu. It recommends getting sufficient sleep, exercising regularly, staying hydrated by drinking water and avoiding sugar, reducing stress, washing hands often, and eating fruits and vegetables. These everyday steps can help strengthen the immune system and reduce the chances of contracting the flu or spreading it to others.
To post a final presentation on SlideShare, create an account with a username and password on the site. Upload the presentation file by clicking upload, selecting the file, and entering the title and names of team members. Save the presentation and copy the URL of the presentation page. Email the URL to instructors to share the final presentation.
This is a slide deck that Laura Jones and her team ran as a video (with a CD in a boombox for soundtrack) in Jennifer Aaker's 2008 Building Innovative Brands class.
- The document discusses various studies and readings on measuring happiness. It explores how happiness is heterogenous and influenced by demographics, psychographics and culture.
- Key findings include that experiences produce longer-lasting satisfaction than material purchases; thinking about time rather than money increases social behaviors linked to happiness; average global happiness is above neutral but wealthier countries are not necessarily happier; and income correlates with life evaluations but feelings depend more on social factors.
- Happiness is subjective and difficult to measure, but large sample sizes can overcome flaws by averaging out responses while first-hand, real-time reports are the least flawed despite still being imperfect.
Designing Happiness is a class taught at the Stanford Graduate School of Business. The class explores the data-driven research on happiness, revealing insights about how to (a) rethink, (b) quantify, (c) visualize, (d) deliver, and (e) build happiness.
On Oct 10, 2010 Tony Hsieh spoke to the Designing Happiness class at the Stanford Graduate School of Business about how he delivers happiness at Zappos.