Because once you know how you are and how other people see you, you can then get into the
A. Meetings.
B. A prolonged moming routine.
C. Challenging customers.
D. Phone calls.
W: Oh, I think he'd be glad to come, but what's difficult is getting the guy to speak before a large crowd.
Q: What does the woman imply about Jeff?
A.He is a person difficult to deal with.
B.He dislikes any formal gathering.
C.He is unwilling to speak in public.
D.He often keeps a distance from others.
A、It is easy and simple to explain ABC to non-financial staff
B、ABC is of limited benefit for a business whose overhead is volume related.
C、Benefits obtained from ABC may not justify the costs.
D、The choice of activities and cost drivers might be inappropriate.
Why is this man so angry? Wedon't know the reason, but we can see the emotion in his face.Whatever cultureyou have, you can understand the feeling that he is expressing.
Forty years ago, psychologistPaul Ekman of the University of California, San Francisco, became inter-ested in how people's faceshow their feelings. He took photographs of Americans expressing variousemo-tions. Then he showed them to the Fore people, who live in the jungle inNew Guinea.Most of the Fore had never seen foreign faces, but they easily understoodAmerican's expressions of anger, happiness, sadness,disgust, fear, andsurprise.
Then Ekman did the sameexperiment in reverse. He showed pictures of Fore faces to Americans,and theresults were similar. Americans had no problems reading the emotions on theFore people's faces. Ekman's research gave powerful support to the theory thatfacial expressions for basic emotions are the same everywhere. He did moreresearch inJapan,Brazil, andArgentina, and got the samere-sults.
According to Ekman, these sixemotions are universal because they are built into our brains. They developedto help us deal with things quickly that might hurt us. Some emotional triggersare universal as well. When something suddenly comes into sight, people feelfear, because it might be dangerous.But most emotional triggers are learned.For example, two people might smell newly cut grass. One reason spent wonderfulsummers in the country as a child, so the smell makes him happy. The otherperson remembers working very hard on a farm and being hungry, so he feels sad.
Once we make an emotionalassociation in our brain, it is difficult, and sometimes impossible, to changeit. "Emotion is the least changeable part of the brain. " says Ekman.But we can learn to manage our emotions better. For instance, we can be moreaware of things that make us angry, and we can think before we react.
There are many differencesbetween cultures, in their languages and customs. But a smile is exact-ly thesame everywhere.
Paul Ekman studies people's faces in different cultures.
A.Right
B.Wrong
C.Not mentioned
A、if anything
B、if something
C、when anything
D、when something
A、use assumptions.
B、ignore all variables.
C、think at the margin.
D、respond to incentives.
A、it can produce more of one product even if it does not produce less of another product.
B、it can produce more of one product only if it produces less of another product.
C、it cannot produce more of one product unless it stops producing the other product entirely.
D、it cannot possibly produce more of one product, even if it produces less of another product.
A、There is no opportunity cost because you own the house.
B、There is no opportunity cost unless you could set up a business in the house.
C、The opportunity cost is the rent you could have received from a tenant if you didn't live there.
D、The opportunity cost is the cost of your monthly mortgage payment plus bills.
A、$104,000
B、$86,000
C、$62,000
D、$44,000
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