Home
The Man Who Lied to His Laptop: What We Can Learn About Ourselves from Our Machines
Loading Inventory...
Barnes and Noble
The Man Who Lied to His Laptop: What We Can Learn About Ourselves from Our Machines
Current price: $24.00
Barnes and Noble
The Man Who Lied to His Laptop: What We Can Learn About Ourselves from Our Machines
Current price: $24.00
Loading Inventory...
Size: OS
*Product Information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, and additional information please contact Barnes and Noble
Counterintuitive insights about building successful relationships- based on research into human-computer interaction.
Books like
Predictably Irrational
and
Sway
have revolutionized how we view human behavior. Now, Stanford professor Clifford Nass has discovered a set of rules for effective human relationships, drawn from an unlikely source: his study of our interactions with computers.
Based on his decades of research, Nass demonstrates that-although we might deny it-we treat computers and other devices like people: we empathize with them, argue with them, form bonds with them. We even lie to them to protect their feelings.
This fundamental revelation has led to groundbreaking research on how people should behave with one another. Nass's research shows that:
Mixing criticism and praise is a wildly ineffective method of evaluation
Flattery works-even when the recipient knows it's fake
Introverts and extroverts are each best at selling to one of their own
Nass's discoveries provide nothing less than a new blueprint for successful human relationships.
Books like
Predictably Irrational
and
Sway
have revolutionized how we view human behavior. Now, Stanford professor Clifford Nass has discovered a set of rules for effective human relationships, drawn from an unlikely source: his study of our interactions with computers.
Based on his decades of research, Nass demonstrates that-although we might deny it-we treat computers and other devices like people: we empathize with them, argue with them, form bonds with them. We even lie to them to protect their feelings.
This fundamental revelation has led to groundbreaking research on how people should behave with one another. Nass's research shows that:
Mixing criticism and praise is a wildly ineffective method of evaluation
Flattery works-even when the recipient knows it's fake
Introverts and extroverts are each best at selling to one of their own
Nass's discoveries provide nothing less than a new blueprint for successful human relationships.