他凭记忆力赢下250万美金,现在要教你如何改善记忆力了
要想赢得美国著名电视智力节目《危险边缘》(Jeopardy!)的冠军,参赛选手必须能够上知天文下懂地理,记住一切有趣的事情——即便很多事情在你看起来很无聊。
Shana Lebowitz is a Strategy reporter for Business Insider.
要想赢得美国著名电视智力节目《危险边缘》(Jeopardy!)的冠军,参赛选手必须能够上知天文下懂地理,记住一切有趣的事情——即便很多事情在你看起来很无聊。
When you're invited to a networking event that sounds kind of blah, you can generally respond with, "I'm not interested; thanks" and feel okay about it.
En la empresa de venta de sostenes en línea, ThirdLove, la curiosidad es uno de los valores más importantes para la compañía y algo que todos los empleados nuevos deben demostrar.
If there's one thing most "Jeopardy" champions have in common, it's that they find everything — even the stuff you consider weird and boring — interesting.
At the online bra company ThirdLove, curiosity is one of the most important company values and something every new hire has to display.
On an episode of The James Altucher Show, Harvard psychologist Susan David shared a somewhat disturbing observation: We're affected by other people's behavior in ways we don't even realize.
Business Insider's Kevin Loria recently spotlighted a test that can give you a scientifically accurate assessment of your personality.
Within a second (or less) of meeting someone, we're already making judgments about their personality — whether they're nice, smart, or even adventurous.
Learning a new language is hard — especially if you're an adult, especially if you're busy, and especially if the language is based on really different sounds than your native tongue.
We use our mind every second of every day, but it's safe to say no one understands exactly how it functions. Even psychologists and neuroscientists are often stumped by why we think and ...
A classmate of mine once asked a professor how and when she knew that academia was the right choice for her.
There are tons of cognitive biases that affect our daily decision-making.
Consider the IKEA bookshelf. Assembling it requires time, and effort, and the energy to fight with your assembly partner because each of you blames the other for losing the last wood dowel.
"When one examines the elite cohorts on the planet — whether you're an elite athlete or an elite military member — it's pretty clear that the way that they handle stress is not by accident."
When Warren Buffett started his investing career, he would read 600, 750, or 1,000 pages a day.