Annoying: The Science of What Bugs Us
Autor Joe Palca, Flora Lichtmanen Limba Engleză Hardback – 7 apr 2011
- Gives fascinating, surprising explanations for why people react the way they do to everything from chili peppers to fingernails on a blackboard
- Explains why irrational behavior (like tearing your hair out in traffic) is connected to worthwhile behavior (like staying on task)
- Includes tips for identifying your own irritating habits!
Preț: 137.96 lei
Nou
Puncte Express: 207
Preț estimativ în valută:
26.41€ • 27.49$ • 21.74£
26.41€ • 27.49$ • 21.74£
Carte disponibilă
Livrare economică 10-24 ianuarie 25
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780470638699
ISBN-10: 0470638699
Pagini: 262
Dimensiuni: 142 x 221 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.39 kg
Editura: Wiley
Locul publicării:Hoboken, United States
ISBN-10: 0470638699
Pagini: 262
Dimensiuni: 142 x 221 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.39 kg
Editura: Wiley
Locul publicării:Hoboken, United States
Public țintă
Science readers love quirky narrative explorations of a subject the affects all of us––death, germs, happiness, love, irrationality, sex, mistakes, and more––especially when they hear about it from NPR. Though that′s the primary audience, the book will also appeal to people trying to understand frustration and unpleasantness as it affects their busines or personal lives (both of which are covered in the book).Descriere
Praise for annoying "Remarkable: a charming and insightful book that explains how studying what annoys you can make you both less annoyed and less annoying. I feel better already!" Chris Anderson, author of The Long Tail and Free
"Who would have thought that one of the most charming, graceful, and informative books to come around in a long while is Annoying? You might have been told you are what you eat, but it is your annoyances that really define you. With cutting–edge science, wit, and an eye for a good story, Palca and Lichtman reveal the recent discoveries that tell us of the age–old problem of annoyance. Their book will forever change your view of the restaurant patron who loudly recounts his colonoscopy results over a cell phone." Neil Shubin, author of Your Inner Fish
"The science of the annoying? I was skeptical. But this book really delivers. In many chapters I saw myself and thought, ′Yeah, I understand, that is exactly how I feel.′ Trouble is, now, with understanding, my tolerance for the annoying has plummeted." Carol Greider, Director of Molecular Biology and Genetics, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, and winner of the Nobel Prize in Medicine in 2009
"Annoying is smart, funny, insightful, and downright wonderful to read. Joe Palca and Flora Lichtman not only illuminate the science of annoyance itself but the often lunatic nature of daily life in the twenty–first century. Read it the only annoying thing about it is that it′s too short." Deborah Blum, author of The Poisoner′s Handbook
"It′s rare to encounter a book that could launch a new scientific subdiscipline. Annoying may do just that. Palca and Lichtman survey thinking in psychology, philosophy, and neuroscience, intermixing research with anecdotes, insights, and theories, to examine the scientifically neglected subject of annoyances. This book is a fascinating read for anyone who has ever wondered why minor irritations can drive us to distraction. Ironically, this book about fingernails on chalkboards is a pleasure to read." Daniel Simons, coauthor of The Invisible Gorilla
"Unlike the stuff we do on NPR, Joe Palca′s reporting is based on insight, knowledge, intellectual curiosity, research, and facts. But don′t let that turn you off!" Click and Clack, the Tappet Brothers
"Who would have thought that one of the most charming, graceful, and informative books to come around in a long while is Annoying? You might have been told you are what you eat, but it is your annoyances that really define you. With cutting–edge science, wit, and an eye for a good story, Palca and Lichtman reveal the recent discoveries that tell us of the age–old problem of annoyance. Their book will forever change your view of the restaurant patron who loudly recounts his colonoscopy results over a cell phone." Neil Shubin, author of Your Inner Fish
"The science of the annoying? I was skeptical. But this book really delivers. In many chapters I saw myself and thought, ′Yeah, I understand, that is exactly how I feel.′ Trouble is, now, with understanding, my tolerance for the annoying has plummeted." Carol Greider, Director of Molecular Biology and Genetics, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, and winner of the Nobel Prize in Medicine in 2009
"Annoying is smart, funny, insightful, and downright wonderful to read. Joe Palca and Flora Lichtman not only illuminate the science of annoyance itself but the often lunatic nature of daily life in the twenty–first century. Read it the only annoying thing about it is that it′s too short." Deborah Blum, author of The Poisoner′s Handbook
"It′s rare to encounter a book that could launch a new scientific subdiscipline. Annoying may do just that. Palca and Lichtman survey thinking in psychology, philosophy, and neuroscience, intermixing research with anecdotes, insights, and theories, to examine the scientifically neglected subject of annoyances. This book is a fascinating read for anyone who has ever wondered why minor irritations can drive us to distraction. Ironically, this book about fingernails on chalkboards is a pleasure to read." Daniel Simons, coauthor of The Invisible Gorilla
"Unlike the stuff we do on NPR, Joe Palca′s reporting is based on insight, knowledge, intellectual curiosity, research, and facts. But don′t let that turn you off!" Click and Clack, the Tappet Brothers
Textul de pe ultima copertă
Praise for annoying "Remarkable: a charming and insightful book that explains how studying what annoys you can make you both less annoyed and less annoying. I feel better already!" Chris Anderson, author of The Long Tail and Free
"Who would have thought that one of the most charming, graceful, and informative books to come around in a long while is Annoying? You might have been told you are what you eat, but it is your annoyances that really define you. With cutting–edge science, wit, and an eye for a good story, Palca and Lichtman reveal the recent discoveries that tell us of the age–old problem of annoyance. Their book will forever change your view of the restaurant patron who loudly recounts his colonoscopy results over a cell phone." Neil Shubin, author of Your Inner Fish
"The science of the annoying? I was skeptical. But this book really delivers. In many chapters I saw myself and thought, ′Yeah, I understand, that is exactly how I feel.′ Trouble is, now, with understanding, my tolerance for the annoying has plummeted." Carol Greider, Director of Molecular Biology and Genetics, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, and winner of the Nobel Prize in Medicine in 2009
"Annoying is smart, funny, insightful, and downright wonderful to read. Joe Palca and Flora Lichtman not only illuminate the science of annoyance itself but the often lunatic nature of daily life in the twenty–first century. Read it the only annoying thing about it is that it′s too short." Deborah Blum, author of The Poisoner′s Handbook
"It′s rare to encounter a book that could launch a new scientific subdiscipline. Annoying may do just that. Palca and Lichtman survey thinking in psychology, philosophy, and neuroscience, intermixing research with anecdotes, insights, and theories, to examine the scientifically neglected subject of annoyances. This book is a fascinating read for anyone who has ever wondered why minor irritations can drive us to distraction. Ironically, this book about fingernails on chalkboards is a pleasure to read." Daniel Simons, coauthor of The Invisible Gorilla
"Unlike the stuff we do on NPR, Joe Palca′s reporting is based on insight, knowledge, intellectual curiosity, research, and facts. But don′t let that turn you off!" Click and Clack, the Tappet Brothers
"Who would have thought that one of the most charming, graceful, and informative books to come around in a long while is Annoying? You might have been told you are what you eat, but it is your annoyances that really define you. With cutting–edge science, wit, and an eye for a good story, Palca and Lichtman reveal the recent discoveries that tell us of the age–old problem of annoyance. Their book will forever change your view of the restaurant patron who loudly recounts his colonoscopy results over a cell phone." Neil Shubin, author of Your Inner Fish
"The science of the annoying? I was skeptical. But this book really delivers. In many chapters I saw myself and thought, ′Yeah, I understand, that is exactly how I feel.′ Trouble is, now, with understanding, my tolerance for the annoying has plummeted." Carol Greider, Director of Molecular Biology and Genetics, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, and winner of the Nobel Prize in Medicine in 2009
"Annoying is smart, funny, insightful, and downright wonderful to read. Joe Palca and Flora Lichtman not only illuminate the science of annoyance itself but the often lunatic nature of daily life in the twenty–first century. Read it the only annoying thing about it is that it′s too short." Deborah Blum, author of The Poisoner′s Handbook
"It′s rare to encounter a book that could launch a new scientific subdiscipline. Annoying may do just that. Palca and Lichtman survey thinking in psychology, philosophy, and neuroscience, intermixing research with anecdotes, insights, and theories, to examine the scientifically neglected subject of annoyances. This book is a fascinating read for anyone who has ever wondered why minor irritations can drive us to distraction. Ironically, this book about fingernails on chalkboards is a pleasure to read." Daniel Simons, coauthor of The Invisible Gorilla
"Unlike the stuff we do on NPR, Joe Palca′s reporting is based on insight, knowledge, intellectual curiosity, research, and facts. But don′t let that turn you off!" Click and Clack, the Tappet Brothers
Cuprins
A Note from the Authors. Introduction: Cell Phones.
1 A Noise Annoys.
2 A Case of Mistaken Intensity.
3 Fingernails on a Chalkboard.
4 Skunked.
5 Bugged by Bugs An Epic Bugging
6 Who Moved Their Cheese?
7 The Terror of Perfect Pitch.
8 Dissonant.
9 Breaking the Rules.
10 He s Just Not That Annoyed by You.
11 Better Late Than Never Doesn t Apply Here.
12 When Your Mind Becomes a Foreign Country.
13 The Annoyed Brain.
14 False Alarms.
Conclusion.
Acknowledgments.
Notes.
Index.
1 A Noise Annoys.
2 A Case of Mistaken Intensity.
3 Fingernails on a Chalkboard.
4 Skunked.
5 Bugged by Bugs An Epic Bugging
6 Who Moved Their Cheese?
7 The Terror of Perfect Pitch.
8 Dissonant.
9 Breaking the Rules.
10 He s Just Not That Annoyed by You.
11 Better Late Than Never Doesn t Apply Here.
12 When Your Mind Becomes a Foreign Country.
13 The Annoyed Brain.
14 False Alarms.
Conclusion.
Acknowledgments.
Notes.
Index.
Notă biografică
Joe Palca is a science correspondent for National Public Radio and the backup host for Talk of the Nation Science Friday. Flora Lichtman is the multimedia editor for Science Friday.