- Guy Kawasaki
Guy Kawasaki , who was Apple's software evangelist, is passionate about the idea that products and services reach critical mass 'because mere mortals spread the word for you.' He also has noted that the people who developed the original Macintosh didn't really have any idea of what people would do with the machine-and thus how its users would influence its development. We're wired to create patterns, but that doesn't mean the first patterns are necessarily useful. - Phineas Gage
Phineas P. Gage (1823 - May 21, 1860) was a railroad construction foreman who suffered a traumatic brain injury when a tamping iron accidentally passed through his skull, damaging the frontal lobes of his brain. This injury is supposed to have negatively affected his emotional, social and personal traits-leaving him in a temperamental and unsociable state, so much so that his friends said he was "no longer Gage". At the time of its report to the scientific community, … - Carl Cameron
Carl Cameron is a television personality for Fox News in the United States, and has served as political correspondent following presidential candidates George W. Bush in 2000 and John Kerry in 2004. He served as chief political correspondent during the 2004 United States presidential election. In 2005 Cameron became chief White House Correspondent. In June 2006, he returned to his post as chief political correspondent to cover the 2006 midterm elections. - David Keirsey
David West Keirsey, PhD (b. August 31, 1921, Oklahoma), is an internationally renowned psychologist, a professor emeritus at California State University, Fullerton, and the author of several books. In his most popular publications "Please Understand Me" (1978, co-authored by Marilyn Bates) and the revised and expanded second volume "Please Understand Me II" (1998), he lays out a self-assessed personality questionnaire, … - Ian Wright
Ian Edward Wright, MBE (born 3 November 1963 in Woolwich, London) is a former professional footballer and current television and radio personality. - John Bell
John Bell is a radio DJ and personality on WHTZ in New York. Bell,at 73, is the oldest member of the station's popular Z Morning Zoo is also the only remaining member of the original morning show cast. His long-running regular features include "Stupid News", where he searches the country's newspapers for the most bizarre articles he can find, and a monthly trivia game with a rhyming title. Mr. Bell is of African American, Chinese and Scottish ancestry. - Hans Eysenck
Hans Jürgen Eysenck was a psychologist most remembered for his work on intelligence and personality, though he worked in a wide range of areas. At the time of his death, Eysenck was the living psychologist most frequently cited in science journals. Hans Eysenck was born in Germany, but moved to England as a young man in the 1930s because of his opposition to the Nazi party. Eysenck was the founding editor of the journal "Personality and Individual Differences", … - Kevin McCarthy
Kevin McCarthy has been a radio-tv personality in north Texas since Gordon McLendon brought him to Dallas as part of the original staff of KNUS/99 in 1972. He spent 14 years as a top-rated talk show host on KLIF before leaving in 2001 to start his own business, a multi-media marketing company. He hosts Dallas Digest (http://www.dallasdigest.com/), an Internet news and message board (http://dallasdigest.mywowbb.com/forum2/recent.html). - Arthur Jensen
Arthur Jensen (born August 24 1923) is a Professor Emeritus of educational psychology at the University of California, Berkeley. Jensen is known for his work in psychometrics and differential psychology, which is concerned with how and why individuals differ behaviorally from one another. He is a major proponent of the hereditarian position in the nature versus nurture debate, the position that concludes genetics play a significant role in behavioral traits, … - Graham Webb
Born in Birmingham, UK, to L. Webb a battle of El Alamein war widow, I was the youngest of 5 children. Started cycling at the age of 8 and was many times British National cycling champion and National record holder at 10 miles, 25 miles and 1 hour. Moved to the Netherlands in 1967 where I became world cycling road champion, signed a professional contract with the French Mercier team in 1968 and moved to Belgium, where I still live with my family. http://crazyaboutbelgium.co.uk/blogs/webb.htm - Raymond Cattell
Raymond Bernard Cattell was a British and American psychologist who theorized the existence of fluid and crystallized intelligences to explain human cognitive ability. He was famously productive throughout his 92 years, and ultimately was able to claim a combined authorship and co-authorship of 55 books and some 500 journal articles in addition to at least 30 standardized tests. In keeping with his devotion to rigorous scientific method, … - David McClelland
David Clarence McClelland was an American behavioral psychologist, social psychologist, and an advocate of quantitative history. McClelland earned his BA in 1938 at Wesleyan University, his MA in 1939 at the University of Missouri, and his Ph.D. in experimental psychology at Yale University in 1941. McClelland taught at the Connecticut College and Wesleyan University before accepting, in 1956, a position at Harvard University. After his 30-year tenure at Harvard he moved, … - Nina
Nina is a Spanish singer turned television personality. In 1989, she represented Spain in the Eurovision Song Contest with the song Nacida Amar, and in 2001, she became the headmistress of the very successful Spanish reality TV show Operación Triunfo. After the 3rd series, she stepped down, and was replaced by Kike Santander. In 2006, she took back to the stage, and premiered new music live on a special summer edition of Operación Triunfo, although none of it is yet to be released. - Henry Murray
Henry A. Murray was an American psychologist who taught for over 30 years at Harvard. He was founder of the Boston Psychoanalytic Society and developed a theory of personality based on "need" and "press". He also is developer of the Thematic Apperception Test (TAT) which is widely used by psychologists. - Jillian Hall
Jillian Fletcher (born September 6, 1980) is an American professional wrestler who currently performs for World Wrestling Entertainment on its "RAW" brand under the ring name Jillian Hall. - Walter Mischel
Walter Mischel (b. 1930 in Vienna, Austria) is a personality psychologist. He has been a professor at Columbia University since 1983; he had previously been a professor at Stanford University. Mischel's famous longitudinal research study, "The Marshmallow Test," showed the importance of impulse control and delayed gratification for academic, emotional and social success. In the 1960s at the preschool on the Stanford University campus, … - C. George Boeree
C. George Boeree (born January 15, 1952 in the Netherlands) is a professor of psychology at Shippensburg University of Pennsylvania. He came to the United States as a boy, and grew up in the New York City area. He and Judith Kovarik married in 1974 and have three daughters. Boeree received his Ph.D. in Psychology from Oklahoma State University in 1980. He has written extensively on psychology, especially phenomenological psychology and personality theory. - Sarah Taylor
Sarah Taylor was discovered in the MuchMusic audience in 2004, and was asked to be one of the VJs for the channel. She accepted the offer. She is most noticed by her 5'11" height, and her afro like hair style, which adds at least 4 more inches to her height. Taylor, originally from Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, has a younger sister (by 6 years), Sabrina. Taylor now co-hosts many of MuchMusic's popular shows, including "Combat Zone", … - Michelle McManus
Michelle McManus (born 8 May 1980, Glasgow, Scotland) is a Scottish singer, Actress and television personality who won the second series of "Pop Idol" in 2003. McManus has been only briefly successful as a recording artist. She currently resides in London. - Shriram Sharma Acharya
Pt. Shriram Sharma Acharya <br>Motto is: : “Ham Badalenge – Yug Badalegaa”, “Ham Sudharenge – Yug Sudharegaa”. When we transform ourselves, the world will be transformed. When we reform ourselves, the world will be reformed. <br> <br>School:Vedic</br> <br>Vision: Movement for the Reconstruction of the Era, … - Sid Hartman
Sid Hartman (born March 15, 1920) is a longtime sports journalist for the Minneapolis "Star Tribune" and the WCCO 830 AM radio station. He is known for his wide range of insider contacts in the sports world, and also for his coarse and, to some, abrasive personality, and a reputation for name dropping. These attributes have led him to be loved by some, but often criticized by other Minnesota sports fans. - Rich Fields
Rich Fields (born November 30, 1960, in Bay Village, Ohio) is an Emmy-award-winning broadcaster and meteorologist best known for being the announcer of the American television game show "The Price Is Right" since Rod Roddy passed away in 2003. Fields was raised in Avon, Ohio, before moving to Clearwater, Florida, in 1976. He graduated from the University of Florida in 1983 with a degree in broadcasting and had a career as a radio personality, … - Elizabeth Wagele
Elizabeth Wagele (born 1939) is an American artist, musician, best-selling writer, and expert on personality types: the Enneagram and the MBTI. - Janice Dean
Janice Dean is a Canadian weather personality on the Fox News Channel. She also substitutes for "Fox News Live" headline anchors when needed. She is known for her nickname, "The Weather Machine," coined by fellow anchor Shepard Smith. She has also been called "Janice Dean the Weather Queen." She was born in Toronto and grew up in Ottawa. Dean began her career in Ottawa at CHEZ-FM, where she was a morning show co-host, reporter, and disc jockey. - Daryl Somers
Daryl Paul Somers OAM (born Daryl Schultz August 6,1951 in Geelong, Victoria, Australia), sometimes referred to as Dazza or Dags, is an Australian television personality. The son of a dairy farmer and a cabaret singer, Somers rose to national fame as the host of the long-running comedy-variety program "Hey Hey It's Saturday". Somers' first appearances on television were as a contestant in the program New Faces. - William Stern
William Lewis Stern, born Wilhelm Louis Stern, was a German psychologist and philosopher noted as a pioneer in the field of the psychology of personality and intelligence. He was the inventor of the concept of the intelligence quotient, or IQ, later used by Lewis Terman and other researchers in the development of the first IQ tests, based on the work of Alfred Binet. He was the father of the German writer and philosopher Günther Anders. - Françoise Hardy
Françoise Hardy is a French singer, actress and astrologer. Hardy is considered an iconic figure in many respects (fashion, music style, personality) in the Francophile world. - Richard Blackwood
Richard Blackwood (born 15 May, 1972, Clapham, London, England) is a British stand-up comedian, television personality, sometime actor and MC of Jamaican origin. He currently co-presents a show on the London radio station, Choice FM, and guests as a disc jockey at nightclubs in the United Kingdom. - Daryl Bem
Daryl J. Bem is a social psychologist at Cornell University, and the originator of the self-perception theory of attitude change. Bem received a B.A. from Reed College in physics in 1960. He later dropped out of graduate study in physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to pursue social psychology. He later earned a Ph.D. from the University of Michigan in 1964. He has also carried out research on psi phenomena (a technical term for "E.S.P."), … - Johnny Olson
John Leonard "Johnny" Olson (May 22, 1910 - October 12, 1985) was an American radio personality and television announcer, most notable for announcing 32 game shows from Mark Goodson-Bill Todman productions, from the late 1950s through the mid 1980s. Born in Windom, Minnesota, while landing jobs at WIBA and KGDA in and nearby Madison, Wisconsin after 1928, Olson enrolled in pharmacy classes at the University of Minnesota. He also worked a string of odd jobs, … - Maurizio Costanzo
Maurizio Costanzo (born August 28, 1938, Pescara) is an Italian television personality. He started his career as a journalist, little by little gaining a certain popularity, and in the late 1970s appeared in several television shows before creating his most famous show, "The Maurizio Costanzo Show", currently the most important and longest-lasting talk show in Italy. Costanzo's TV style includes subtle low-profile irony. - Ian Dickson
Ian "Dicko" Dickson (born 28 March 1963 as Ian Ross Perrygrove in Birmingham, England) is a music industry and television personality in Australia. He is best known as a judge on the hit television show "Australian Idol". - John Otway
John Otway, (born 2 October 1952, in Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire, England) is a self-confessed unsuccessful singer-songwriter, who built a large cult audience through unrelenting touring, a surreal sense of humour and a winning underdog personality. - Lee Leonard
Lee Leonard (born in New York City on April 3, 1929) is an American television personality who was involved in the launch of two of the most influential networks in TV history. - Helen Morrison
Helen Morrison, is a forensic psychiatrist currently residing in Chicago, Illinois. She is best known for her efforts to understand the psychology of serial killers, and has personally interviewed about 80 of them. The focus of her research has been to find common personality traits between serial killers. She has published about 125 academic papers and a book, My Life Among the Serial Killers : Inside the Minds of the World's Most Notorious Murderers. Dr. - Paul E. Meehl
Paul Everett Meehl was an American psychology professor. Born in Minneapolis, Minnesota, Meehl attended University of Minnesota, earning his bachelor's degree in 1941 and his doctorate in 1945. He went on to teach there throughout his career, with faculty appointments in psychology, law, psychiatry, neurology and philosophy. Meehl was a leading philosopher of science. - Nathan Brody
Nathan Brody is an American psychology professor known for his work on intelligence and personality. Brody received his BA from University Of New Hampshire and his MA and PhD from University of Michigan. He currently teaches at Wesleyan University. In 1995, Brody was part of an 11-member American Psychological Association task force led by Ulric Neisser which published "Intelligence: Knowns and Unknowns," a report written in response to "The Bell Curve". - Dave Glover
Dave Glover is a radio personality and host of "The Dave Glover" show, which airs on weekdays from 4pm-7pm on 97.1 FM Talk in St. Louis, Missouri. Prior to his current career in radio, Dave was an attorney. - Eduard Spranger
Eduard Spranger, born June 27, 1882 in Berlin, died September 17, 1963 in Tübingen, was a German philosopher and psychologist. Spranger's contribution to personality theory, in his book "Types of Men" ("Lebensformen"; Halle (Saale): Niemeyer, 1914; translation by P. J. W. Pigors; New York: G. E. Stechert Company, 1928) were his value attitudes. - David P. Schmitt
David P. Schmitt is a personality psychologist who founded the International Sexuality Description Project (ISDP). The ISDP is the largest-ever cross-cultural research study on sex and personality. Over 100 psychologists simultaneously administered an anonymous self-report survey to 17,837 individuals representing 56 different nations, 6 continents, 13 islands, and 30 languages.
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