enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Peer pressure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peer_pressure

    Peer pressure is a direct or indirect influence on peers, i.e., members of social groups with similar interests and experiences, or social statuses. Members of a peer group are more likely to influence a person's beliefs, values, religion and behavior.

  3. Workplace 'peer pressure' may help you form healthy habits - AOL

    www.aol.com/workplace-peer-pressure-may-help...

    Health experts have long known that an excessively sedentary lifestyle is bad for you in many ways, raising risks of so many health problems — diabetes, weight gain, depression, dementia ...

  4. Peer group - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peer_group

    Peer groups can have great influence or peer pressure on each other's behavior, depending on the amount of pressure. However, currently more than 23 percent of children globally lack enough connections with their age group, and their cognitive, emotional and social development are delayed than other kids.

  5. Submit to Peer Pressure, Double Your Savings - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2012-10-19-submit-to-peer...

    If peer pressure is the main factor driving the impact of self-help peer groups, then physical meetings may be key to the success of peer groups. At a minimum, the behavior of an individual has to ...

  6. Social influence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_influence

    It takes many forms and can be seen in conformity, socialization, peer pressure, obedience, leadership, persuasion, sales, and marketing. Typically social influence results from a specific action, command, or request, but people also alter their attitudes and behaviors in response to what they perceive others might do or think.

  7. Opinion - Grading the Trump-Harris debate — the good, the bad ...

    www.aol.com/opinion-grading-trump-harris-debate...

    The Harris campaign is already proposing a second debate. Stay tuned. Stay tuned. Chris Truax is an appellate attorney who served as Southern California chair for John McCain’s primary campaign ...

  8. Rogerian argument - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rogerian_argument

    Rapoport himself, in his 1960 discussion of the Rogerian strategy in Fights, Games, and Debates, connected the ethics of debate to non-zero-sum games. [78] Rapoport distinguished three hierarchical levels of conflict: fights are unthinking and persistent aggression against an opponent "motivated only by mutual animosity or mutual fear"; [79]

  9. ‘Consequences and repercussions’: Post-debate Democratic ...

    www.aol.com/consequences-repercussions-post...

    At the debate, Trump insinuated that “Black jobs” were being stolen by immigrants, prompting social media users to question what the former president considered a “Black job” to be.