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"Anything we can do to save time is tremendously important," said Alan E. Pisarski, a consultant on traveler behavior and author of the book "Commuting in America".
Gail Evans, professor of organizational behavior and author of "Play Like a Man, Win Like a Woman," echoed Silva's sentiments.
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As Karyn Hall, a Dialectical Behavior Therapy trainer and author of The Emotionally Sensitive Person, points out in a Psychology Today blog, your connection to others can do wonders for your wellness.
"Watch a collie work with a sheepherder and you will come away amazed how small a gesture the person can do to communicate with his dog," said Alexandra Horowitz, a dog behavior expert at Barnard College and author of "Inside of a Dog".
"We had the rallying around the flag; maybe what this produces is the 'see you later' effect," said Robert Wright, a scholar of human behavior and the author of "Nonzero" and "The Moral Animal".
"I admire Jacques Rogge stepping up and setting a new threshold for ethical behavior," said Steven Ungerleider, a psychologist and author of "Faust's Gold," a book about the East German doping machine.
Rottweilers were developed in Germany to drive cattle to market and guard the money purse on the way home and so they have enhanced aggression, said Dr. Nicholas H. Dodman, director of the animal behavior clinic at the Tufts University School of Veterinary Medicine and author of "Dogs Behaving Badly".
Robert R. Provine, professor of psychology at the University of Maryland, and author of Curious Behavior: Yawning, Laughing, Hiccuping, and Beyond, believes it is important to further tease apart different ways in which social interactions might be linked to wellbeing.
"You need to have an internal and external P.R. strategy," said Jeffrey Pfeffer, professor of organizational behavior at Stanford's business school and author of "Power: Why Some People Have It — and Others Don't" (HarperBusiness, 2010).
If the denizens below — lions, giraffes, zebras, gorillas, bears and bugs — drew any satisfaction from the situation, they were not saying, but they probably knew something was up, said Marc Bekoff, a former professor of animal behavior at the University of Colorado and author of "The Emotional Lives of Animals," a book published last year.
Luckily, as a psychologist at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County and author of Curious Behavior: Yawning, Laughing, Hiccupping, and Beyond, he isn't offended.
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