Job reassignment of employees as motivational action

INDIVIDUAL

ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR à The study of how individuals and groups interact within organizations to describe, understand, predict, and change behavior

Lewin’s Equation (B=f(P,E))à


Behavior is a function of Personality (Internal) and Environment (External). Ezxmple:

Chile Miners:

The extreme environment forced them to suppress selfish traits and cooperate.

Internal vs. External Factors à Internal (P):


Personality, emotions, motivation, hard/soft skills.

External (E):

Work culture, leadership,

Read More

Nuclear Physics: Forces, Decay, and Energy Principles

Forces in the Nucleus

  • Gravity: Force of attraction.
  • Weak nuclear: Weak interaction.
  • Strong nuclear: Strong interaction.

The strong force is attractive at very short distances and repulsive at slightly longer distances as a residual effect of holding together electrons and nucleons. Isotopes have the same number of protons but a different number of neutrons.


Half-Life Calculations

Half-Life FormulaFinding Number of Half-Lives

N = N0 x (1/2)n

n = T / t1/2

wAAACH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAICRAEAOw== wAAACH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAICRAEAOw== wAAACH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAICRAEAOw== wAAACH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAICRAEAOw== wAAACH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAICRAEAOw== wAAACH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAICRAEAOw==

N = number of nuclei or mass remaining

N0 = start

Read More

SAP Production Planning: Core Concepts and Processes

SAP PP Organizational Structure

  • Client: An independent environment in the system.
  • Company Code: Smallest organizational unit for which you can maintain a legal set of books.
  • Plant: Operating area or branch within a company, such as a manufacturing, distribution, purchasing, or maintenance facility.
  • Storage Location: An organizational unit allowing differentiation between various stocks of a material in a plant.
  • Work Center Locations (Master Data): An organizational unit defining where and when an operation
Read More

Corporate Diversification and Strategic Alliance Frameworks

Corporate Diversification Strategies

Diversification is defined as the entry into new industries outside a firm’s current value chain. It occurs when a firm operates in two or more distinct industries.

Strategic Purpose and Financials

  • Goal: Create shareholder value.
  • Condition: Return on Invested Capital (ROIC) from new ventures must exceed shareholder returns from dividends.
  • Free Cash Flow: Management must choose between distributing cash as dividends or reinvesting in diversification. Diversification
Read More

Human actuality

La llamada machosfera se presenta como un espacio de defensa masculina, pero en realidad suele ser un refugio de resentimiento y simplificación. Bajo discursos de “verdades incómodas”, se promueven ideas que reducen las relaciones humanas a competencia, desconfianza y dominio. Esto no solo perjudica a las mujeres, sino también a los propios hombres, al encasillarlos en modelos rígidos de masculinidad que limitan su desarrollo emocional.

En lugar de fomentar el diálogo o la igualdad, muchos

Read More

Causes of World War I: Alliances, Imperialism, and Conflict

European Alliances and Mutual Protection

Topic: Why European nations formed opposing alliances

  • Mutual Protection: Nations joined alliances to protect themselves from potential attacks by forming powerful combinations that no single country would dare strike.
  • Fear and Distrust: Deep-seated rivalries and historical tensions, such as the Franco-Prussian War, led countries to seek out reliable partners for security.
  • The Triple Alliance & Entente: By 1914, two major blocs emerged: the Triple Alliance
Read More

Essential English Grammar and Essay Writing Skills

1. First Conditional

Structure: If + present simple, will + verb

Example: If I study, I will pass.

More examples:

  • If she calls, I will answer.
  • If it rains, we will stay home.

2. Second Conditional

Structure: If + past simple, would + verb

Example: If I had money, I would buy a car.

If I were taller, I would play basketball.

3. Passive Voice

Structure: to be + past participle

Example: The book was written by the author.

Common verbs: write → written, make → made, speak → spoken, build → built, produce

Read More

Mathematical Methods in PDEs and Statistical Analysis

Partial Differential Equations (PDE)

A Partial Differential Equation (PDE) involves a function u(x, y, …) and its partial derivatives.

  • Homogeneous: If every term in the equation contains the dependent variable u or its derivatives. The general solution is simply the Complementary Function (C.F.).
  • Non-Homogeneous: If there is a term that is a function of the independent variables only (f(x, y)). The solution is u = C.F. + P.I. (Particular Integral). Example: ∇2u = f(x, y) (Poisson’s Equation).
Read More

Fundamentals of Statistics: Concepts and Data Analysis

1. Statistics: Descriptive vs. Inferential

Statistics is the science of collecting, organizing, presenting, analyzing, and interpreting data to draw meaningful conclusions and support decision-making.

Comparison of Statistical Methods

BasisDescriptive StatisticsInferential Statistics
MeaningSummarizes and describes dataDraws conclusions about population
PurposeTo present data clearlyTo make predictions/decisions
Data usedUses complete data setUses sample data
TechniquesMean, median, mode, graphsProbability,
Read More

Clinical Psychology Exam Review: Disorders and Treatments

Sleep Disorders and Treatment

  • Sleep efficiency: Percentage of time asleep while in bed. Healthy is ≥85%; below this is in the insomnia range.
  • Parasomnias: Abnormal events during sleep.
  • Dyssomnias: Issues with sleep quantity, timing, or quality.

3P (Spielman) Model

  • Predisposing: Pre-existing biological, psychological, or social vulnerabilities (e.g., neuroticism).
  • Precipitating: Acute stressor or illness triggering onset.
  • Perpetuating: Coping behaviors that maintain insomnia (e.g., excess time in bed,
Read More