Japanese 7A - 2014-09-16 |NO AUDIO FOR FIRST 30 MINUTES OF CLASS
Japanese 7A, 001 - Fall 2014 Introduction to Premodern Japanese Literature and Culture - John R Wallace Creative Commons 3.0: Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs
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CAT people vs. DOG people. Which one are you?
A web-based survey of more than 1,000 pet owners nationwide analyzed the key personality traits and nurturing styles of people who identified as a “cat person,” a “dog person,” “both” or “neither.”
Surprisingly perhaps, those who expressed the greatest affection for their pets also rated among the most conscientious and neurotic, suggesting that the qualities that make for overbearing parents might work better for our domesticated canine and feline companions, who tend to require lifelong parenting.
The research was conducted by UC Berkeley and California State University, East Bay. Mikel Delgado, a doctoral student in psychology at UC Berkeley co-authored the study.
Video by Roxanne Makasdjian, Phil Ebiner, and the Public Affairs/Communications team.
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This lecture is part of a series, ""Implementing Health Care Reform in California,"" which examines the Affordable Care Act as it relates to access, cost, and quality of care issues relevant to the state.
Speaker Larry Levitt is senior vice president for special initiatives and senior advisor to the president with the Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonprofit, private operating foundation focusing on the major health care issues facing the U.S.
Speaker Bruce Bodaken is chairman and CEO of Blue Shield of California is a 3.3 million member not-for-profit health plan that serves the commercial, individual, and government markets in California.
Sponsored by the UC Berkeley School of Public Health, the Goldman School of Public Policy at UC Berkeley, and the Robert Wood Johnson Post-doctoral Scholars Program in Health Policy Research.