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Feb. 3 Daily HUT Content - What is new?

Hey guys, it’s Coooolin!! Does anyone know what day it is? Anyoneee? Anyone at alll!? I guess, I’m gonna guess the day... guess what day it is....guess what day it is.... HUUMMPP DAYYY! We’re halfway thru a brand new week of the brand new month! Can you believe it!? Wild! How’s everyone’s week so far!? Let me know, doownn belooww!
Here’s the new cards for today, Thanks EA! :)

Team of The Week

February 3 - February 10
(Its filthy!)

Forwards

LW - C - RW
Line 1
Connor McDavid - 94 OVR - EDM / C - GLA1 , WH1
Leon Draisaitl - 95 OVR - EDM / C - LTL1 , MAG1
Claude Giroux - 91 OVR - PHI / C - PP1 , WM1
Line 2
James Van Riemsdyk - 89 OVR - PHI / LW - HOW1 , T1
Joonas Donskoi - 83 OVR - COL / RW - LTL1 , WM1
David Perron - 86 OVR - STL / LW - SPE1 , MAG1
Line 3
Brandon Saad - 86 OVR - COL / LW - PP1 , T1
Carter Verhaeghe - 83 OVR - FLA / C - SH1 , WH1
Nathan Bastian - 78 OVR - NJD / C - SWA1 , SPE1
Line 4
Chris Didomenico - 80 OVR - FRI / RW - BAL1 , GLA1
Hannes Björninen - 80 OVR - PEL / C - BAR1 , HOW1
Per Åslund - 79 OVR - FAR / RW - SPA1 , MAG1

Defence

LD - RD
Line 1
Quinn Hughes - 88 OVR - VAN / LD - LTL1 , WM1
John Carlson - 91 OVR - WAS / RD - PP1 , SH1
Line 2
Rasmus Ristolainen - 87 OVR - BUF / RD - SH1 , WH1
Tyson Barrie - 87 OVR - EDM / RD - GLA1 , HOW1
Line 3
Tyson Hinds - 78 OVR - OCE / LD - SPA1 , SH1
Jan Lattner - 78 OVR - INN / LD - BAR1 , SPE1

Goalies

Thatcher Demko - 87 OVR - VAN / G - 6’4” / 192 lbs - SWA1 , DIS1
Vitek Vanecek - 80 OVR - WAS / G - 6’1” / 187 lbs - DIS1 , H and S1
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Primetimes

NHL

Joe Pavelski - 89 OVR - DAL / C - PP1 , WM1
Tyler Toffoli - 88 OVR - MTL / RW - LTL1 , MAG1 ... FIIILTTHY GOALL
Vince Dunn - 87 OVR - STL / LD - HOW1 , WH1
Jesse Puljujarvi- 86 OVR - EDM / RW - SPE1 , SH1
Jordan Staal - 85 OVR - CAR / C - GLA1 , T1 ... 95 FOs
Warren Foegele - 84 OVR - CAR / LW - WM1 , SH1
Valeri Nichushkin - 83 OVR - COL / RW - MAG1 , WH1
Laurent Brossoit - 82 OVR - WPJ / G - 6’3” / 204 lbs - BAR1 , BAL1
Nicholas Deslauriers - 82 OVR - ANA / LW - PP1 , LTL1
Derek Forbort - 82 OVR - WPJ / LD - HOW1 , SH1

Other Leagues

Thomas Wellinger - 79 OVR - LUG / LD -
Lassi Lehtinen - 79 OVR - LUK / G -
• • • • • • • • • • - - - - - - - - - • • • • • • • • • • • •

Packs Available

1D / 23H
• Mega Players Pack - 50k C / 1k P
30 items , all Gold Players , with at least 5 80+ OVR Players
• NHL Players Pack - 30k C / 600 P
10 items, all Gold NHL players with at least 4 80+ OVR Players
• Jumbo Premium Pack - 15k C / 300 P
20 items , at least 9 players with at least 4 Gold Players

P.S.

• New TOTW - February 3 - February 10
• Squad Battles Resets - Today at 5pm EST
• Rivals Rewards - Today at 5pm EST ... what did you get

Hockey News

Hockey in History
Sabres postpone games

Stock Market News

Stocks are all mixed up
Pot Stocks are winners today!

Other News

3 Beginner CAD Stocks
Vancouver’s only day of sun
——————

What’s to Come?

• Squad Battles Rewards - Tomorrow at 5pm EST
• New Game Modes HUT RUSH - Tomorrow at 5pm EST
• Silver Upgrades for 3 - 86 OVR - Bronze Icons - Tomorrow at 5pm EST
• MORE EVENT CARDS! - Friday at 5pm EST
—————

Summary of the day

Quick Read
Best Forward of the Day - TOTW - is LEEOONN DRAAIISAAITLL OVR 95 with the syn LIIGHTTT THE LAAMPP and MAGIICIAAN
Best Defence of the Day - TOTW - is JOHHNN CARLSSON OVR 91 with the syn PAASSINN PLAAAYMAKERRR and SHUUTTT DOOWNN
/////
Best Forward of the Day - PT - is JOOOEEE PAVELSSKII OVR 89 with the syn PASSINN PLAYYMAKERRR and WOORKKHORSEEE
Best Defence of the Day - PT - is VIINCEE DUNNN OVR 87 with the syn HOOWWITZERR and WOOORKK HORSEEE
• NEW TOTW!
• Squad Battles Resets - Where did you place? I didn’t play any! Lol!
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Important Notice

Don’t be ashamed to be yourself. Don’t try and be someone else, don’t try and change yourself for someone... cos the right people? Will like you for you. No one will like you if you act happy all the time, you don’t have any problems, and life is 110% stress free.
Be open. Have an open mindset, let down your walls, and let people know who you are. It’s scary - but its worth it. They’ll either love you, or hate you... but the thing that matters most is that you’re your true self.
Be you. Be true....just be yourself, and I promise you!!! You will get SO far!
Do not fake being someone else - you’ll feel like you always have to be that “person” all the time in order for people to like you... just be YOU! m
Love you all.
Take care.
You matter, and remember to smile; even if you cant — it’ll make you happier!!

Interested in Stocks?

EA’s Stock Price, after hours - Feb 3
$ 140.82 (usd) —- Currency Converter
we looked at the stock at $137.54 usd
—— That is a difference of ( $3.28 / 2.38% ) —
Ouch, quite a giant dip... either hold, or buy the dip if you believe in EA
EA’s Q3 Earnings
Disclaimer - I am not a financial advisor. It is your money, please do your own due diligence. I am not responsible for your money. This is *not** advice. Your capital is at risk. I added this section for an added educational purposes only. Thanks*
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NEED A SOUNDTRACK TO LISTEN TO?

WE’RE AT 1200+ SONGS! WOW! How are you not listening to this playlist already!?
Comment songs to add, and please give feedback! It’s much appreciated!!
I currently have “Sk8r Boi” by “Avril Lavigne” stuck in my head.... which you can play, recently added to the playlist!
Sidenote - How do you guys like the playlist!? I have a friend who makes music...and I really want to surprise him with some new people listening to his music... if you wanna help me, please click Here!! it would mean a lot to me!!
———-

Sites To Bookmark!

If you click here you will be redirected to bilasport. Bilasport is the best Online Streaming site for your entertainment needs for all sports! (Not affiliated)
A great streaming source recommended by NHLStreams is SurgeSport. Click on Hockey and you’ll be good to go!
Want to make your dream team, and show others what you’ve been working on, and much more? I will redirect you HERE!.
Here’s a helpful pack guide for you! Click!
Want to know how the market is holding up? With a simple TAP! you will be on the newly fresh made website for the HUT market, made by one of the guys on the sub!
.... what do the stats on a card mean? Is my card I want / pulled good? Click here to find out!!
When is my favourite team playing? When do they play!? Here you can click on this link, and tap on your favourite team. From there, tap “Schedule” . You can add this to your homescreen on iPhone by clicking the square with the upwards arrow, scrolling down, and tapping “Add to Home Screen”
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Fighting a Gambling Addiction?

Don’t feel scared to click here. Winning is SO much louder than losing. Know that you are NEVER alone. We are all here for eachother, and it is never too late to get help. I am here for you.
This is a VERY important thread, especially if you are new to HUT. Here!

Story Time!!!

Yes I know I haven’t posted one in awhile
This will be a personal story time.
I don’t really know who reads all this far orr nott, but!
Lately I’ve been feelin pretty anxious and worried about my dad and his job... he’s off now (with pay, thankfully) until he finds a new place to help build... whether that be far away, or closeby, I just personally want him to be happy. He’s not used to being at home - and him being home with me is - lol - pretty weird... I think he’s going bored out of his mind already.. not too sure!
I don’t really talk much to my dad, nor does he talk a lot to me... but like I know he obviously cares, and loves me. — is every dad like that? Not really talkative?! lol —
Anywho! I just hope he’s proud of me, and that he gets a job closeby to where we live...
Hah, thanks for reading this lil “story” ... I guess I should just put it as “Coolin’s Thoughts” for today !
I appreciate your time.
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34 / 365
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Thanks for reading. I appreciate your time.
I’m always welcome to feedback, please let me know what I can improve on.
If there’s anything missing, please let me know!
Take care, happy gaming! TODAY IS NATIONAL MISSING PEOPLES DAY ... and NATIONAL CARROT CAKE DAY
• Coolin Killin It
(Life is like a puzzle, you just have to find the right piece.)
submitted by coolin68 to NHLHUT [link] [comments]

[Table] I'm Jeff Galak, Professor of Marketing & Social and Decision Science at Carnegie Mellon University. I have published dozens of academic papers on decision making, consumer behavior, and more. I have also recently launched a new YouTube channel called Data Demystified. AMA! (pt 1/3)

Source | Signoff
Note: This table may potentially contain information that can be construed as self-doxxing. Please don't actually try to take advantage of this.
Questions Answers
Hey Jeff! I'm a minimalist & find that I'm happier with less stuff & when I give/receive experiences rather than items. Do you find consumer happiness reflects this shift towards minimalism since that is a (small, but seemingly growing) trend, especially among Millennials? Great question! There is some relatively new research looking at happiness from experiences vs. material possessions. Most of it shows that happiness from equally valued (e.g. price) experiences is higher than for possessions. HOWEVER, and this is a big however, all that work tends to ignore long run happiness with highly prized possessions. For instance, if you have a sentimentally valued object, happiness that stems from that object lasts for a long time. What most possessions don't do is provide long lasting happiness. You buy a new shiny toy and it DOES make you happy...but that happiness goes away quickly. My collaborators and I have termed this idea "Hedonic Decline."
So as for minimalism, there is not evidence that I know of that shows that less possessions make you happier. There's plenty showing that more possessions don't make you happier, but that's not the same thing.
One more layer of complexity: there are two routes to happiness: hedonic and eudaimonic. The former is what we usually think of when we think of happiness: how much joy does XYZ bring me. The latter, however, is closer to self-actualization. It's the happiness the comes from a accomplishing something....even if there was pain involved in getting there. I wonder if minimalism can increase eudaimonic happiness.
the below is a reply to the above
That's interesting. Thank you for responding. In the minimalism community, self-actualization is reflected in endeavors such as achieving certain goals (like, paying off debt) that usually involves some amount of self-discipline &/or self-sacrifice. I'd say that the vast majority of research in happiness excludes eudaimonic happiness, largely because it's so hard to measure. My personal, non-data supported, take is that eudaimonic happiness is far more important than hedonic happiness. The latter is fleeting, whereas the former can be life changing.
the below is a reply to the above
Beautifully said. Thank you.
the below is another reply to the second answer
How does depression affect eudaimonic happiness compared to hedonic happiness? Great question and I don't know the answer. Social Psychology typical studies what we very poorly term "normal" psychology, which excludes clinical conditions like depression. Sorry!
the below is another reply to the second answer
What’s your take on “pay to play” - as in, some “hedonic” purchases at are required to signal you’re in the game, making progress on eudaimonic happiness. When you get older and into your career, I’d venture many people have already figured out that hedonic happiness doesn’t do squat long-term, but there’s a balance in terms of how much hedonic happiness to have to acquire for the ultimate long-term eudaimonic happiness. Example: in sales, which I’m in tech analytics sales, companies want to spend for solutions to business problems, but they also want to see, visually, that the person they’re paying is a good representative for them. High cost equals a person that can represent that taste. Nice. Tailored suits, a nice watch and latest tech gadgets. There’s a pay to play aspect that signals to the world who I am, and that in turn actually allows me to get what I want- student loans paid off and early retirement.. I don't think there's any conflict here. If you will find some form of life satisfaction by succeeding in your career, there's no harm in also purchasing items that help you reach that goal. Those items can, in and of themselves, make you happy...nothing wrong with that. More to the point, hedonic and eudaimonic happiness don't have to be in opposition. You can have both!
the below is another reply to the original answer
I really like this response. While i can jive with basic premise of experiences over possessions...i’m find it used a lot by people who actually just want to shirk obligation. I run HHiring and there is a persistent trend of people not wanting to act like their job is important..just because it’s easier to justify bailing on work/shifts to go do things when you can say you’re doing it for the experience, not focusing on the money you make at a job. I’m trying to figure out the best way to respond to people who think i’m some big bad money grubbing boss for wanting people to do their jobs. Meanwhile, in my personal life...i feel like i’m getting a lot of push back socially from people who think i should only work where i can just make my own schedule and dip put for an “experience” whenever. At the end of the say, it feels like people will just wax philosophic reasons for demanding leisure with all the material perks of having jobs and working. Great point. This relates to intrinsic vs. extrinsic motivation. The former is the desire to do something because it's inherently interesting/rewarding. The latter is doing something for compensation. This is more in the realm of organizational behavior, and you'll have to wait for my wife who is also a professor, but of organizational behavior and theory, to do an AMA for more on that :)
Hello, thanks for doing this. Are you familiar with "loot boxes" in video games? I feel like the topics of a lot of your papers would fit right into why consumers/businesses use loot boxes. How does a loot box mechanic differ from gambling and should it be treated the same? (Regulation, age restriction, etc) If they are the same, how do you feel about video games including a loot box mechanic? Sticking with gambling parallels, what are your thoughts on video game companies targeting "whales" given that gamers can be any age nowadays? I'm not a gamer myself (though I do love TTPRGs and run a D&D 5e campaign), but I'm pretty familiar with loot boxes. Mobile games and social media platforms in general have become very good at continuous reinforcement. It can be the allure of getting a new outfit in a loot box or just an upvote on Reddit...the point is that we are wired to love small rewards, even if those rewards are meaningless. Casinos have mastered this art and loot boxes are an capitalizing of the same basic psychological mechanisms: need for positive reinforcements. So are loot boxes the same as gambling? Probably not the SAME, but damn close. As for regulation, I am strongly in favor of making gambling of all forms only accessible to adults and even then providing access to counseling for those who suffer from gambling addiction.
I have a lot less sympathy towards wealthy adults who choose to gamble as a form of entertainment. The problem is that it's not always obvious who's a whale and who's just pretending to be one for the attention. The latter is highly susceptible to financial ruin and I'd want them protected just the same as they are with standard gambling.
the below is a reply to the above
Do you find the researcher in you observing and asking questions about the players' decision making processes in your D&D campaign? My old DM minored in psychology, and I often felt like a rat in his experiments. I enjoyed it, though. It kind of added an extra facet to the game. More than my research, teaching has made a huge difference in being a DM. When I lecture, I am forced to be quick on my feet to understand student questions, reply accordingly, and make sure that I'm moving the lecture along. That is the same with DMing. I need to be able to understand the motives of my players, respond appropriately with NPCs, and keep the story going.
I'm sure that my knowledge of psychology helps, but I wouldn't think it influences the way I DM (or play) that much.
the below is a reply to the above
Studying business Psychology in Switzerland and leading the yawning portal atm, seems like I need to start teaching :p Ha! Check out this thread: https://www.reddit.com/WaterdeepDragonHeist/comments/fcc89a/the_yawning_portal_a_drinking_song_and_boss_music/
I used that for my game and it was great.
the below is another reply to the original answer
Could I join your 5e campaign? Ha! Sorry, no. It's just close friends and we're months into it. I'm running Waterdeep, if you're curious.
the below is a reply to the above
I'm applying to Carnegie's MBA for what it's worth! If I'm accepted, may I join then? ;-) How about you get in and then we discuss!
Hi Jeff! What is your favorite heuristic or logical fallacy when it comes to decision making? Can you teach us about one that people might not know about? Easy: Diversification Bias. That's where I started my career 15 years ago. I didn't discover this bias, but have built on it. Anyway, it's the idea that people choose more variety than they should. For example, if you are going to pick some snacks for the next few days, you might pick: chips, pretzels and an apple. Those are fine, but really chips are your favorite and you picked the other two because you thought you'd get tired of chips every day. Well, turns out you'd be wrong. A day is enough to reset satiation/hedonic-decline in most cases, so you'd be better off always picking your favorite option! Doing otherwise means eating snacks that are less preferred.
A new one that my doctoral student, Julian Givi, and I recently published: The Future Is Now (FIN) Heuristic. It's the idea that people believe that future events will be like present events, even when evidence points to the contrary. An example: if it's sunny today, you're more likely to think it'll be sunny tomorrow, even if the forecast clearly predict rain. What happens is you treat information about the present as having evidentiary value for future events, even when that's just not true.
the below is a reply to the above
I really like that you give your student credit. PhD students do all the hard work. Professors just bask in the glory :)
the below is another reply to the original answer
I think diversification bias is how I ended up with 5 shades of blue nail polish that are virtually undistinguishable from each other! Interesting to consider. Ha! Just might be...
Tell me about your paper "Sentimental value and gift giving: Givers’ fears of getting it wrong prevents them from getting it right". From what I read of the abstract, it seems that gift-givers undervalue sentimental value, seeing it as riskier. Why is that, and how can we give better gifts? Sure, this is a paper with my former doctoral student, Julian Givi. Basically, people are risk averse in gift giving when they shouldn't be. If I know you like coffee and I have a choice to give you some nice coffee beans or a framed photo of the two of us (presumably since we're friends), I give the former b/c it's a sure bet. But as the recipient, overwhelmingly, people prefer the latter. So givers should take the risk and give the sentimentally valuable gift over one that is more a sure bet.
the below is a reply to the above
Interesting. When giving presents, givers focus too much on the recipient's known wants, which gets in the way of giving a meaningful present. Thank you! I'll be sure to keep that in-mind next Christmas. That's exactly it.
the below is another reply to the original answer
I sometimes hesitate at this. I don’t want to come off as the selfie culture of all about me in pictures! But relatives do love getting pics of the kids for gifts. Still, how often is this perceived as a form of narcissism by the gift receiver? Edit: pictures of my kids not just me! One trick we do: every Christmas holiday we print full size calendars with our kids pictures on them. That's our holiday gift to all the grandparents. They LOVE it.
We also send small photo books to the grandparents throughout the year of some of the best pictures we take.
We have yet to send too many, but that's specific to our family.
The best advice I always have for something like this is: just ask! People are often worried about asking gift recipients about their preferences, but our research shows that a) recipients don't care about being asked and b) you can give better gifts that way.
Hi Jeff ! I have a question regarding involvement in a purchase, is there an increasing trend to become highly involved in the purchase of even low value object ? I find myself doing this during the pandemic doing comparison searches for a bulb which costs 10 dollars. Is this an exception ? Or is there some underlying psychological reason isolated to me ? Absolutely. Two reasons this could be happening. 1) With more free time, the threshold for what merits deep research drops a lot. 2) Many people are facing financial hardships, and so making sure every dollar is well spent becomes really important.
Hi Jeff, Thank you for the great AMA. Where do you see the future of insights departments in consumer companies? Most companies looks like giving up on ethnographic and in person research and focus on data analytics. I speculate management is under great pressure and in the meantime aspire to Google, Amazon etc. What is your take of insights departments future in large companies? Thank you! Exploratory research like ethnographies, interviews, and focus groups is really useful for brainstorming. But they are a poor substitute for quantitative data. Now, that doesn't mean "big data"...just data that has larger samples and is better representative of populations. Surveys are still amazing. When we want to forecast an election, we don't use big data, we conduct a political poll. They work.
But yes, right now, AI and machine learning are the hot new ideas on the block and everyone wants in on them. There is plenty of amazing applications of AI/ML, but what they can't do is tell you "why". As in, why did someone choose this option over that one? Or why are people motivated by this goal or that goal? Those types of answers allow you to apply knowledge in completely novel contexts. AI/ML needs to be trained on a specific type of data for a specific type of task. It is AMAZING at that. But as soon as you introduce a new context or new set of experiences, it fails. That's where good old fashioned surveys and behavioral experiments come in.
If a program was built to help us make better decisions, do you think we would use it? Do you think we can listen to a program’s advice better than we do from experts? We already do. Weather forecasts tell us how to dress. Facebook tells us what to think. Tinder tells us who to date. Etc... etc...
A program that EXPLICITLY tells you what to do won't work too well. People like to feel like they have free will. They don't, though. We are greatly influenced by our environment (not just technology) whether we know it or not. As one example: I can guess your weight reasonably well just by knowing your zip code (please don't make me actually do this as I'm not in the business of public shaming!). If we had true free will and agency, that should be impossible. Instead, we are the products of our environment.
the below is a reply to the above
60641 Chicago? I believe Illinois has 30-35% obesity (I'm doing this quickly and not looking at your zip specifically), so pretty high weight.
Hi Jeff! Since I'm a 14 yrs old and knew nothing about what you study, I have very limited questions I can ask. But as I have observed, people are often sheepish and will consume as the trend goes. What is the most unexpected trend, worldwide? P.S. will defo check out your channel I don't expect most people to know my work (I like to think my ego isn't THAT big!), so no worries!
You're right. Trends will drive a lot of human behavior. We are social creatures and follow what others do much more than we care to admit. As for the most unexpected trend, that's really hard to say. Maybe this is too broad, but I'm surprised by how short people's attention span is when it comes to current events. News cycles used to last for weeks, now they last for hours. I suppose I know that people don't have long attention spans, but I'm still surprised.
the below is a reply to the above
Any underlying reasoning for this? For the short attention spans? We can invoke evolutionary psychology, which I'm not a big fan of, and it would suggest something like a tensions between exploring and cultivating. So it would argue that our ancestors needed to have some reason to leave their immediate tribe to find new resources. So perhaps our attention spans are short b/c of this and the current environment exaggerates that behavior.
Have you done(or can you point to) any research relating to the decision making/not making around getting rid of possessions? I have a relative who keeps anything that has a perceived value as in could be sold on ebay/garage sale which they never sell. They are otherwise rational, clean, don't over consume..def not hoarder territory.. but I struggle to convince them that the old digital camera that's been sitting for 3 years could just be disposed of. Hoarding is definitely a thing. There isn't much in the study of item disposition in the empirical world of research (lots of interesting qualitative work that I'm less familiar with). The big exception to this is the Endowment Effect. The short version is that you value items you own more than if you don't own it. So a mug sitting on a store shelf is worth, say $10 to you, but as soon as you own it is worth, say, $20 to you. Nothing changed except your ownership of it. That explains some of hoarding behavior, but not all of it.
For a qualitative research paper on the topic, see here: https://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/mcb/216/2010/00000013/00000001/art00001
the below is a reply to the above
I suppose I have the Endowment Effect. Everytime I find something valuable i dont have the will to let it go. Even though i can sell it and re buy it later, or buy something similar haha. It's like I want to take the most of it and use it til it brakes, go missing, or whatever. The endowment effect isn't infinite. As in, it's not that you won't be willing to sell your items for ANY price, it's just that your willingness to sell is higher than your willingness to buy.
the below has been split into two
Hey Professor, appreciate the AMA. A couple of questions: 1) Just from my own thoughts banging around in my head and observations I've made during the pandemic, do you see the pause our society went through and the economic downturn effecting the psychology behind materialism? It seems the American "push for more no matter what" mind state took a eating and I think I'm seeing some consequences of that. 1) It's possible, but my pretty strong prediction is that within 1-2 years of the pandemic ending, we will be back to where we were beforehand in terms of materialism and general behavior. Extreme events like a pandemic seem like they are life changers. For some, that's true (e.g. someone loses a loved one), but for most it's not. We are inherently myopic and think that the thing in front of our noses is the only thing that exists.
2) I'm a current medical student and we get inundated with so many studies that it's overwhelming. Trying to practice evidence based medicine is really hard in an atmosphere that prioritizes publishing with little regard to quality. Do you ha e ways of navigating that I could apply to my day to day? Thanks again. 2) I can't speak to medical research, but that problem exists in all academic fields. The best thing to do is to let science happen. There will always be flashy new findings, but the ones that really matter will get replicated over and over again...and will get built on. The BS ones tend to just die out. That's not a full proof approach to vetting research, but it's better than just assuming everything you see published is true and/or important.
I am a former CMU student. How do you feel about CMU's decision to appoint Richard Grenell as a senior fellow? And how can we do something to fight against it because it seems they are not listening the current student body? Recently, the fence was vandalized against BLM (they wrote "all lives matter" over the previously written "black lives matter"). How are you working to build a more inclusive community at CMU and to fight for those who need it? How can former students help? I signed the petition to revoke his appointment and stand by that completely. I do understand why the university is upholding it, but I am embarrassed to have him associated with CMU.
As for the fence, the CMU Provost sent a really great letter immediately after it all happened condemning the vandalism and supporting BLM. Personally, I try VERY hard to do things like call on students of all races and genders and not let white men (of which I am one, btw) dominate conversations. I try to make sure that examples I use to highlight ideas include more than just typically white and/or male oriented products. I have been trained in Green Dot deescalation for sexual assault and violence. I am on the university academic disciplinary committee and have direct say over infractions like harassment or discrimination. And I sit on my college's Faculty Diversity Equity and Inclusion committee with the hope of including representation and inclusion of URM and female faculty. I care about this topic a LOT and do what I can...still probably not enough.
As for alums, if you see behavior at CMU that you think is antithetical to inclusiveness, let the administration know. Get your fellow alums to weigh in. The university wants your sweet sweet alumni donations. If you are all pissed off, they'll reply.
Hey Professor! I absolutely love to give. But I feel so awkward being thanked. And I dont really like receiving gifts. What would the psychology behind that be? Great question. It's hard to know without more detail, but I'd guess that some of that anxiety is about attention...as in, your lack of desire for it. As for not liking receiving gifts, maybe you have just not received that many good gifts? Again, it's really hard to say without knowing a bit more about you and the gift giving contexts you're involved in. If you want to share more, I can try to answer better, but totally understandable if you don't!
the below is a reply to the above
Well, if I think more deeply....whenever I need something, I feel like it's up to me to make me happy. I usually don't really ask anyone else. Whether I need a massage, have a getaway, or get my dream dog, I just do it myself. As an aside, self-gifts are great! You get what you need, and nothing else. No issues there.
To your question, though, I do wonder if you just haven't receive that many great gifts. Yes, gifts can fall flat and the recipient might not love them, but when they hit, they not only provide the value from the gift itself (e.g. a great bottle of wine) but ALSO the sentimental value from the associations that the gift brings up (e.g. who gave it to you and under what circumstances...like for a birthday or graduation).
Hi Jeff, I have a job application at a place where they do conjoint analysis, something I have never done before. Got any tips? Do you have any thoughts on the technique in general? Personally as someone who takes surveys I find it very abstract (e.g. "Would you rather buy a $5 toaster with two slots vs. a $20 toaster that takes bagels?" I don't know!). First, good luck with the job application! Conjoint is a really useful tool when used correctly (like any tool, I suppose). The short version is that it lets you extract utility weights for different dimensions (e.g. price, product size, product speed, etc...) without directly asking people to answer questions about those dimensions. So instead of saying "how important is price to you?" you would come up with product profiles that have varying price (among other things) and then have people choose between those profiles. You can then extract, using nothing more than regression analysis (though, practically, no one does it that way...they use software like Sawtooth or SPSS Conjoint), how important those dimensions are for any given person.
the technique is tedious in that respondents have to make LOTS of pair-wise comparisons, but the end product can teach you a lot about what people actually value.
One key is to make the task as simple and realistic as possible. So the example you gave is confusing and wouldn't work too well. But I asked you to choose between a $20 toaster with 2 slots vs. a $30 toaster with 3 slots" that would work (in reality it would be more complex than that). You'd be forced to tell me if you prefer a cheaper toaster with fewer slots or a more expensive one with more slots. There's not right answer, but I would learn about those two dimensions for you. I'd need a lot more pair-wise tradeoffs to do this right, but that's the general idea.
Do you find that there are significant differences between particular groups? Does age influence gift giving habits more then sex, or some other factor? Just curious about the general trends of gift giving between groups. Super general question I know, so feel free to just call me out on it Definitely difference across genders as you would expect. More jewelry given by men to women. More gadgets given by women to men. Not so much in terms of age, though I've never really directly looked at that. The reality is that most gifts aren't that exciting. They tend to be things that are popular in a given year or old standbys like gift cards and ties. There certainly are amazing gifts and gift givers out there, but the vast majority of actual gifts given are pretty mundane. But that's not a bad thing if the recipient still likes what they get!
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Yeah, sounds about right. And yeah if everyone is chipper it's all good :) Is there a sort of gift quality vs quantity data? Like is it better to get more frequent smaller gifts or largemore expensive gifts less frequently? Smaller more frequent gifts every time. I have some new work on obligatory vs. non-obligatory gifts. Basically, you can make someone very happy by giving a small gift on a random Tuesday compared to a much nicer gift on their Birthday. More random-tuesday gifts every time!
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Thank you! :) will the results of that be on ur channel? Probably not. The channel isn't about my research, but rather about how to understand data more broadly. But the results will hopefully be published soon!
How extensive are the consumer psychology divisions in companies like apple? Lots of variation. Places like apple, google, amazon will have a lot of depth in terms of psychologist and consumer behavior researchers. But those are the gold standard. Most will rely on consultants to help out
How does education on finance and economics affect consumer behavior? Does knowing the way our brains make consumer decisions or how businesses try to get you to buy change how you shop? If you understand better how firms are trying to entice you to buy their products, you can absolutely counteract that better. For instance, $1.99 is really just $2...we all get that. But it turns out, having a 9-ending price really drives demand. That's nuts, but it does. IF you understand that, you stand a shot and not being duped by something so trivial. So educating yourself can be a big help. On finance and econ eduction, also really helpful, but in other ways. When you go to get a 30-year mortgage for your home, understanding how interest rates work, how inflation might affect home prices, how amortization tables work, etc... will help you make a much more informed decision about what is right for you.
hi! how do you predict consumer happiness/decision making etc during unprecedented times like this, when such a scenario may not have taken place before and you do not have much data to go on? also since the research you do and the data you collect are relevant to sales, do you see advertisements being affected by the pandemic in the long run from any changes in consumer mindset? It's really hard to predict much of anything right now. There are some basic behaviors and experiences that we can expect during a pandemic (e.g. increased anxiety, defaulting to familiar experiences, increased online shopping), but the reality is you're right...we just don't know. There's virtually no data on pandemic psychology/behavior, and all the pop-science stuff you read is just guessing at what will happen.
As for advertising, I think that once the pandemic is over, life will be back to what it was beforehand in almost every respect. People are amazing to adapting to changing circumstances. We are all doing that now with the pandemic and will all do that again when it's over. I don't think that advertising will be any different. Give it a year after we're all vaccinated (or whatever winds up being the solution) and most people will largely forget that we even had a pandemic. Yes, some will have big changes like lost loved ones or lost jobs, but for most people, life will return to what it was before Covid hit.
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thank you for answering, that is very interesting! the data you collect seems to be applicable to so many different fields. i asked about advertising as a student interested in media, but i can see it being useful in various types of companies be it internet security, food, travel etc. your job sounds really cool and i will definitely check out your YouTube channel :) Thanks!
Did you ever get to meet Herbert Simon? Wasn't he interested in similar things? I wish! I've been at CMU for 11 years. Simon passed away in 2001, so I missed him by a few years.
And yes, Simon was one of the original researchers into what's known as Bounded Rationality, it's the idea that humans don't act like computers and process all information simultaneously, but rather use heuristics and shortcuts to accomplish most tasks.
How influential was the work of Daniel Kahnemann to your current teaching? VERY! I don't know Danny personally, but my advisor got his PhD at Princeton when Danny was there, so lots of indirect influence that way. More generally, the field of decision making was build on his (and others) work, so hard not to be influenced.
Do you have any opinions on investors behavior during covid 19? More specifically how certain financial firms may have targeted people who have or would dabble in market that have recently lost work due to the pandemic? Caveat: I am not a finance professor. That said, my read is that fear of missing out (FOMO) is driving a lot of unexpected behaviors. The market has rallied like crazy since the March low and everyone wants in on that. It's hard to sit by and watch others make a killing while you don't.
As for practices like getting people who don't typically to invest to do so, there's two sides to this. On the one hand, getting more people involved with investing is a great thing. It used to be only that the very wealthy could invest and reap the benefits of the market, but now with places like Robinhood and fee-free trading on Schwab and the like, everyone can participate. On the other hand, MANY people don't understand risk well at all. They just see the possible upside and ignore the possibility of losing a lot (see that guy that committed suicide b/c of a terrible options trade...that's horrible). So firms and gov't have a responsibility to both educate investors and provide safeguards against uninformed behaviors.
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Hello, I just want to specify something in your comment! The young college student who committed suicide did so because a misprogrammed number on the trading site, Robinhood. Of course at the time he did not know it, but the value loss that was near $800,000, was showing the loss of the entire option, not his equity in the option, which was -$1,000 - -$2,000 if I remember right. It was Robinhood's terrible interface, not his misunderstanding of risk, which is horrible. If you would like a misunderstanding of risk on trading platforms, look no further than wallstreetbets, of course as you said FOMO is a huge factor, or if you're interested, some trading platforms intentionally advertise to consumers without properly representing risk. Thank you very much for this AMA, it has been quite insightful! Thanks so much for that clarification!
I have a question re: dating sites / apps. Is there a way to structure incentives so that the company is motivated to find good pairings between users? It feels like Tinder, Bumble, Hinge, etc. don't have such an incentive currently I think they do have an incentive to make good pairings. Word of mouth is their strongest asset so having good matches is key. The challenge is that good matches are hard to come by and not everyone agrees on what good is. Is good marriage? Is it a fun night? Not clear.
Hello Professor and thank you for taking this time. As a professional that works in marketing and a person who suffers from mental illnesses, it is often disheartening for me to see so much valuable research and findings be easily made available for use by companies for marketing and consumer exploitation while it is so difficult for those who are struggling to find information that could be beneficial to living their lives more freely. What are your thoughts on this, and do you think there are ways we could change the system to better benefit individuals needs directly? The connection between marketing academia, marketing industry, and consumers just sucks. No one outside of academia reads marketing academic journals. Few in academia care if their work has applications (even in an applied field like marketing). And consumers can't be bothered (rightfully) to read through academic work to learn.
Some solutions that I've seen that work: - Marketing Science Institute: this is an organization whose entire goal is link academia and practice. They have conferences where they invite folks from both sides to collaborate. More of this please! - Pop-science social science books like Freakonomics, Blink, Predictably Irrational, etc...: They all have plenty of shortcomings, but the authors all do an amazing job of conveying the ideas of academia to the public. I think that's fantastic. More of this too please! - Consulting for non-profits. I do this and many others do as well. We use our knowledge to help non-profits do their amazing work. This is a way to avoid that "exploitation" you mentioned and instead use what we know to help others. There's not much money in this kind of consulting, which is why few do it, but it's really important. Maybe some kind of granting agency could earmark money for non-profits to hire academic consultants to help them use what we know to help the world. That would be awesome
hey, I'm a recent advertisement graduate, it's good to see someone from such a familiar field here anyways, when I do groceries, I always follow the list to a T, and I take no time at all getting the items, basically, I go against every little trick supermarkets have to "seduce" the customer, so my question is: what makes someone a "good customer"? is it someone highly susceptible to the marketing tricks at the market or someone who spends both their money and time more efficiently? Good can mean different things here. You sound like you're probably super loyal to products. That's pretty great for most companies. The fact that you don't succumb to unintended purchases definitely makes you less attractive in one capacity, but your predictability makes you very attractive in other ways. If I could run a company where every customer always bought the same thing every week, I would LOVE that. I would know how to schedule raw material purchases, delivery schedules, etc... I would have a steady and dependable income. If, however, I relied just on getting lucky and catching the eye of customers as they passed my products on store shelves, that would be a whole lot more difficult a business plan to execute.
Hi Jeff, I have always geared my life towards maxing out the benefits and deducting the losses for example leaving my family in order to search for better life oportunities, ditching jobs where I felt safe in favor of new and more promising ones. And by this logic I have reached quIte far in my life. But at the end achieving all this goals don't yields the expected satisfaction. However I'm pretty sure that don't doing this would be even worse. Why does it seems that no matter if the desitions taken are the best at my point of view it still seems like I need more than the goals I have achieved. Why is disatisfaction the expected result? Wow, that's a lot to give up for goals! People are inherently likely to make what are known as upward comparisons. We don't look at the people who we have done better than, but instead focus on the few who done better than us. The classic example is Silver Olympic medalists. They should be elated, but instead they just covet the Gold medalist.
Beyond that, in your specific case, it's hard to say for sure, but we know that close relationships are the number one driver of life satisfaction. If you've given those all up in pursuit of some other goal, that might explain things a bit. Take that with a grain of salt as all I know about you is summed up in 100 words or so!
Hello Jeff, glad to see this AMA here! I'm a statistics student in Brazil (one of my professors got his doctorate degree at Carnegie Mellon University, in fact!). Much of what we learn nowadays is related to careers pertaining the finance fields. Other stuff includes academic research mixed with other fields. I see myself as a data analyst for a big bank someday, but I always think: is there any career for a data scientist thats underrated by modern standards but still awesome and rewarding, in your opinion? Go work for a non-profit! It's now where the money is, but many need help from data scientists. You can actually change the world that way!
Which US dollar bill is your favorite? Cash? You still use cash?
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For coke yeah Oh, in that case.... Nope, not replying and losing my tenure :)
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Prof, you have a bias. OP mean Coca Cola. I don't drink soda either :)
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Mega eTextbooks release thread (part-27)! Find your textbooks here between $5-$25 :)

Please find the list below:
  1. Managerial Economics and Strategy, Global 2nd Edition: Jeffrey M. Perloff & James A. Brander
  2. Information Technology and Organizational Learning: Managing Behavioral Change in the Digital Age, 3rd Edition: Arthur M. Langer
  3. Human Anatomy & Physiology Laboratory Manual: Elaine N. Marieb & Lori A. Smith
  4. Principles of Molecular Virology, 6th Edition: Alan J. Cann
  5. The Wiley Handbook of Global Educational Reform, 1st Edition: Kenneth J. Saltman & Alexander J. Means
  6. Prescott's Microbiology, 10th Edition: Joanne Willey & Linda Sherwood & Christopher J. Woolverton
  7. Systems Analysis and Design, 6th Edition: Alan Dennis & Barbara Haley Wixom & Roberta M. Roth
  8. Love and Intimacy in Online Cross-Cultural Relationships: The Power of Imagination, 1st Edition: Wilasinee Pananakhonsab
  9. The Human Organism: Explorations in Biological Anthropology, 1st Edition: Elizabeth Weiss
  10. Nursing Theories and Nursing Practice, 4th Edition: Marlaine Smith & Marilyn Parker
  11. Statistics for Nursing: A Practical Approach, 3rd Edition: Elizabeth Heavey
  12. Life Cycle Assessment of Energy Systems: Closing the Ethical Loophole of Social Sustainability, English Edition: Nicholas Sakellariou
  13. A Practical Guide to Welding Solutions: Overcoming Technical and Material-Specific Issues: Robert W. Messler
  14. Programming the World Wide Web, 8th Edition: Robert W. Sebesta
  15. Maternal and Child Health Nursing: Care of the Childbearing and Childrearing Family, 8th Edition: JoAnne Silbert-Flagg & Adele Pillitteri
  16. Cengage Advantage Books: Culture Counts: A Concise Introduction to Cultural Anthropology, 4th Edition: Serena Nanda & Richard L. Warms
  17. International Management Behavior: Global and Sustainable Leadership, 7th Edition: Henry W. Lane & Martha L. Maznevski
  18. Cultural Competence in Health Education and Health Promotion, 2nd Edition: Miguel A. P¿rez & Raffy R. Luquis
  19. Sub-seasonal to Seasonal Prediction: The Gap Between Weather and Climate Forecasting, 1st Edition: Andrew Robertson & Frederic Vitart
  20. Retail Analytics: Integrated Forecasting and Inventory Management for Perishable Products in Retailing, 2015th Edition: Anna-Lena Sachs
  21. Molecular and Cell Biology of Cancer: When Cells Break the Rules and Hijack Their Own Planet, 1st Edition: Rita Fior & Rita Zilhão
  22. Qualitative Marketing Research: Understanding Consumer Behaviour, 1st Edition: Dominika Maison
  23. Communicating in Small Groups: Principles and Practices, 11th Edition: Steven A. Beebe & John T. Masterson
  24. America's Courts and the Criminal Justice System, 13th Edition: David W. Neubauer & Henry F. Fradella
  25. Services Marketing: Concepts, Strategies & Cases, 4th Edition: K. Douglas Hoffman & John E.G. Bateson
  26. Kinematics, Dynamics, and Design of Machinery, 3rd Edition: Kenneth J. Waldron & Gary L. Kinzel & Sunil K. Agrawal
  27. Essentials of Cultural Anthropology: A Toolkit for a Global Age, 2nd Edition: Kenneth J. Guest
  28. An Anthropology of Learning: On Nested Frictions in Cultural Ecologies, 2015th Edition: Cathrine Hasse
  29. Health Promotion Programs: From Theory to Practice, 1st Edition: Society for Public Health Education (SOPHE) & Carl I. Fertman & Diane D. Allensworth
  30. The American Lab: An Insider’s History of the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory: C. Bruce Tarter
  31. Food Security and Climate Change, 1st Edition: Shyam Singh Yadav & Robert J. Redden & Jerry L. Hatfield & Andreas W. Ebert & Danny Hunter
  32. Health Assessment for Nursing Practice, 6th Edition: Susan F. Wilson & Jean Foret Giddens
  33. Tobacco Smoking Addiction: Epidemiology, Genetics, Mechanisms, and Treatment: Ming D. Li
  34. Cultural Anthropology: Asking Questions About Humanity, 2nd Edition: Robert L. Welsch & Luis A. Vivanco
  35. Accounting for Governmental & Nonprofit Entities, 17th Edition: Jacqueline Reck & Suzanne Lowensohn & Earl Wilson
  36. Addiction and Change: How Addictions Develop and Addicted People Recover, 2nd Edition: Carlo C. DiClemente
  37. Culture and the Politics of Welfare: Exploring Societal Values and Social Choices: J. Hudson & N. Jo & A. Keung
  38. Essential University Physics: Volume 2, 3rd Edition: Richard Wolfson
  39. Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association, 6th Edition: American Psychological Association
  40. Concepts of Programming Languages, 11th Global Edition: Robert Sebesta
  41. Through the Lens of Anthropology: An Introduction to Human Evolution and Culture, 1st Edition: Robert J. Muckle & Laura Tubelle de González
  42. Practical Research: Planning and Design, 11th Edition: Paul D. Leedy & Jeanne Ellis Ormrod
  43. Environment: The Science Behind the Stories, 6th Edition: Jay H. Withgott & Matthew Laposata
  44. Environment: The Science Behind the Stories, 3rd Canadian Edition: Jay H. Withgott & Matthew Laposata & Barbara Murck
  45. Applied Calculus for the Managerial, Life, and Social Sciences: A Brief Approach, 10th Edition: Soo T. Tan
  46. Essential Environment: The Science Behind the Stories, 5th Edition: Jay H. Withgott & Matthew Laposata
  47. Leadership and School Quality: Michael DiPaola & Wayne K. Hoy
  48. Group Dynamics, 7th Edition: Donelson R. Forsyth
  49. Practitioners' Guide to Human Rights Law in Armed Conflict, 1st Edition: Daragh Murray & Elizabeth Wilmshurst & Francoise Hampson & Charles Garraway & Noam Lubell & Dapo Akande
  50. Educational Administration: Theory, Research, and Practice, 9th Edition: Wayne Hoy & Cecil Miskel
  51. Group Dynamics for Teams, 5th Edition: Daniel J. Levi
  52. Human Behavior and the Social Environment: Shifting Paradigms in Essential Knowledge for Social Work Practice, 6th Edition: Joe M. Schriver
  53. Economics of Development, 7th Edition: Dwight H. Perkins & Steven Radelet & David L. Lindauer & Steven A. Block
  54. Carbon Nanomaterials for Bioimaging, Bioanalysis, and Therapy, English Edition:por Yuen Y. Hui & Huang-Cheng Chang & Haifeng Dong & Xueji Zhang
  55. Canadian Essentials of Nursing Research, 3rd Edition: Carmen G. Loiselle & Joanne Profetto-McGrath & Denise F. Polit & Cheryl T. Beck
  56. Rock Dynamics: From Research to Engineering: Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Rock Dynamics and Applications, 1st Edition: Haibo Li & Jianchun Li & Qianbing Zhang & Jian Zhao
  57. Organic Chemistry As a Second Language: Second Semester Topics, 4th Edition: David R. Klein
  58. International Dimensions of Organizational Behavior, 5th Edition: Nancy J. Adler & Allison Gundersen
  59. An Introduction to Group Work Practice, 8th Edition: Ronald W. Toseland & Robert F. Rivas
  60. Bacterial Therapy of Cancer: Methods and Protocols, 1st Edition: Robert Hoffman
  61. Design Optimization of Fluid Machinery: Applying Computational Fluid Dynamics and Numerical Optimization, 1st Edition: Kwang-Yong Kim & Abdus Samad & Ernesto Benini
  62. Children, 13th Edition: John W. Santrock
  63. Retail Supply Chain Management, 2nd Edition: James B. Ayers & Mary Ann Odegaard
  64. Research Methods for Business Students, 7th Edition: Mark N.K. Saunders & Philip Lewis & Adrian Thornhill
  65. Fundamental Principles of Law and Economics, 1st Edition: Alan Devlin
  66. Principles of Economics, A Streamlined Approach with Connect, 3rd Edition: Robert Frank & Ben Bernanke & Kate Antonovics & Ori Heffetz
  67. Mastering AutoCAD 2019 and AutoCAD LT 2019, 1st Edition: George Omura & Brian C. Benton
  68. Finite Mathematics for Business, Economics, Life Sciences and Social Sciences, Global 13th Edition: Raymond A. Barnett & Michael R. Ziegler & Karl E. Byleen
  69. Managerial Accounting: Tools for Business Decision Making, 6th Edition: Jerry J. Weygandt & Paul D. Kimmel & Donald E. Kieso
  70. Modern Principles of Economics, 3rd Edition: Tyler Cowen & Alex Tabarrok
  71. AutoCAD 3D Modeling: Exercise Workbook: Steve Heather
  72. AutoCAD For Dummies, 17th Edition: Bill Fane
  73. Health Promotion in School: Theory, Practice and Clinical Implications, UK Edition: Antonio Iudici M.D.
  74. Criminal Justice: A Brief Introduction, 12th Edition: Frank Schmalleger
  75. Culture′s Consequences: Comparing Values, Behaviors, Institutions and Organizations Across Nations, 2nd Edition: Geert Hofstede
  76. Retailing Management, 9th Edition: Michael Levy & Barton A Weitz & Dhruv Grewal
  77. Cooking: The Quintessential Art: Hervé This & Pierre Gagnaire & M. B. DeBevoise
  78. Cancer Stem Cells: Methods and Protocols, 1st Edition: Gianpaolo Papaccio & Vincenzo Desiderio
  79. College Algebra, 3rd Edition: John W. Coburn & Jeremy P. Coffelt
  80. Algebra and Trigonometry: Real Mathematics, Real People, 7th Edition: Ron Larson
  81. Microbiology Fundamentals: A Clinical Approach, 2nd Edition: Marjorie Kelly Cowan
  82. Culture and Values: A Survey of the Western Humanities, 8th Edition: Lawrence S. Cunningham & John J. Reich & Lois Fichner-Rathus
  83. Operating System Concepts Essentials, 2nd Edition: Abraham Silberschatz & Peter B. Galvin & Greg Gagne
  84. Capitalist Family Values: Gender, Work, and Corporate Culture at Boeing: Polly Reed Myers
  85. Practical Homicide Investigation: Tactics, Procedures, and Forensic Techniques, 5th Edition: Vernon J. Geberth
  86. Research Methods For Business: A Skill Building Approach, 7th Edition: Uma Sekaran & Roger Bougie
  87. Fundamentals of Financial Management, 15th Edition: Eugene F. Brigham & Joel F. Houston
  88. Business Statistics: A First Course, 7th Global Edition: David M. Levine & Kathryn A. Szabat & David F. Stephan
  89. The SAGE Handbook of Qualitative Business and Management Research Methods: History and Traditions, 1st Edition: Cathy Cassell & Ann L Cunliffe & Gina Grandy
  90. Diversity in Organizations, 2nd Edition: Myrtle P. Bell
  91. Macroeconomics, 5th Edition: Manfred Gartner
  92. Goldman-Cecil Medicine, 25th Edition: Lee Goldman & Andrew I. Schafer
  93. Material Culture in Russia and the USSR: Things, Values, Identities, 1st Edition: Graham H. Roberts
  94. Cognitive Psychology: Connecting Mind, Research, and Everyday Experience, 5th Edition: E. Bruce Goldstein
  95. Handbook of Personality Disorders: Theory, Research, and Treatment, 2nd Edition: W. John Livesley & Roseann Larstone
  96. Transformations: Women, Gender and Psychology, 3rd Edition: Mary Crawford
  97. Culture, Leadership, and Organizations: The GLOBE Study of 62 Societies, 1st Edition: Robert J. House & Paul J. Hanges & Mansour Javidan & Peter W. Dorfman & Vipin Gupta
  98. Adolescent Rationality and Development, 3rd Edition: David Moshman
  99. The Wiley Handbook of Action Research in Education, 1st Edition: Craig A. Mertler
  100. Principles of Virology, 4th Edition: S. Jane Flint & Vincent R. Racaniello & Glenn F. Rall & Anna Marie Skalka
  101. Pilbeam's Mechanical Ventilation: Physiological and Clinical Applications, 5th Edition: J M Cairo
  102. Polyoxometalates: Properties, Structure and Synthesis, UK Edition: Aaron P. Roberts
  103. Learning & Behavior: 8th Edition: James E. Mazur
  104. Microeconomics: Canada in the Global Environment, 9th Edition: Robin Bade & Michael Parkin
  105. Fundamentals of Ship Hydrodynamics: Fluid Mechanics, Ship Resistance and Propulsion, 1st Edition: Lothar Birk
  106. Blind Peoples Pragmatic Abilities, 1st Edition: Jolanta Sak-Wernicka
  107. M: Management, 5th Edition: Thomas Bateman & Scott Snell & Robert Konopaske
  108. Munson, Young and Okiishi's Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics, 8th Edition: Philip M. Gerhart & Andrew L. Gerhart & John I. Hochstein
  109. Conceptual Physics, 12th Edition: Paul G. Hewitt
  110. The Wiley Handbook of Vocational Education and Training, 1st Edition: David Guile & Lorna Unwin
  111. Principles of Marketing: 7th Edition: Gary Armstrong & Stewart Adam & Sara Denize & Michael Volkov & Philip Kotler
  112. Probability and Statistics for Engineering and the Sciences, 9th Edition: Jay L. Devore
  113. Management: Leading & Collaborating in a Competitive World, 13th Edition: Thomas Bateman & Scott Snell & Robert Konopaske
  114. Pediatric and Neonatal Mechanical Ventilation: From Basics to Clinical Practice, 2015th Edition: Peter C. Rimensberger
  115. A New Psychology of Women: Gender, Culture, and Ethnicity, 4th Edition: Hilary M. Lips
  116. Cognitive Psychology: Connecting Mind, Research, and Everyday Experience, 4th Edition: E. Bruce Goldstein
  117. Life-Span Development, 17th Edition: John Santrock
  118. Emerging Genres in New Media Environments, 1st Edition: Carolyn R. Miller & Ashley R. Kelly
  119. Polyunsaturated Fatty Acid Metabolism, 1st Edition: Graham C. Burdge
  120. Biological Psychology, 13th Edition: James W. Kalat
  121. Mosby's Respiratory Care Equipment, 10th Edition: J. M. Cairo
  122. Computational Electromagnetics with MATLAB, 4th Edition: Matthew N.O. Sadiku
  123. Database Systems: Design, Implementation, & Management, 13th Edition: Carlos Coronel & Steven Morris
  124. MATLAB® Essentials: A First Course for Engineers and Scientists, 1st Edition: William Bober
  125. American Corrections: Concepts and Controversies, 2nd Edition: Barry A. Krisberg & Susan Marchionna & Christopher Hartney
  126. Principles and Practice of Phytotherapy: Modern Herbal Medicine, 2nd Edition: Kerry Bone & Simon Mills
  127. Microeconomics, 7th Global Edition: Jeffrey M. Perloff
  128. Modern Industrial Organization, Global Edition, 4th Edition: Dennis W. Carlton & Jeffrey M. Perloff
  129. Chemistry: A Molecular Approach, 4th Edition: Nivaldo J. Tro
  130. Business Communication: Process & Product, 9th Edition: Mary Ellen Guffey & Dana Loewy
  131. Lehne's Pharmacology for Nursing Care, 10th Edition: Jacqueline Burchum & Laura Rosenthal
  132. Florence Under Siege: Surviving Plague in an Early Modern City, 1st Edition: John Henderson
  133. Cultural Anthropology: An Applied Perspective, 10th Edition: Gary Ferraro & Susan Andreatta
  134. Foundations of Business, 6th Edition: William M. Pride & Robert J. Hughes & Jack R. Kapoor
  135. American Law in a Global Context: The Basics, 1st Edition: George P. Fletcher & Steve Sheppard
  136. Psychology of Women and Gender, 1st Edition: Miriam Liss & Kate Richmond & Mindy J. Erchull
  137. All-In-One Care Planning Resource: Medical-Surgical, Pediatric, Maternity, and Psychiatric-Mental Health, 4th Edition: Pamela L. Swearingen
  138. Theoretical Basis for Nursing, 5th Edition: Melanie McEwen & Evelyn M. Wills
  139. Research Methods for the Behavioral Sciences, 6th Edition: Frederick J Gravetter & Lori-Ann B. Forzano
  140. The Practice of Public Relations, 13th Global Edition: Fraser P. Seitel
  141. Basics of Mechanical Ventilation, 1st Edition: Hooman Poor (Author)
  142. Public Relations: The Profession and the Practice, 4th Edition: Dan Lattimore & Otis Baskin & Suzette Heiman & Elizabeth Toth
  143. Introductory Chemistry, 1st Edition: Julia Burdge
  144. Essentials of Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences, 8th Edition: Frederick J Gravetter & Larry B. Wallnau
  145. Molecular Genetics of Bacteria, 4th Edition: Larry Snyder & Joseph E. Peters & Tina M. Henkin & Wendy Champness
  146. Essentials of Biostatistics in Public Health, 3rd Edition: Lisa M. Sullivan
  147. Essentials of Environmental Health, 2nd Edition: Robert H. Friis
  148. Introduction to Linear Algebra, 5th Edition: Gilbert Strang
  149. Positive Psychology: The Science of Happiness and Flourishing, 2nd Edition: William C. Compton & Edward Hoffman
  150. Essentials of Mechanical Ventilation, 3rd Edition: Dean Hess & Robert Kacmarek
  151. The Essential World History, Volume I: To 1800, 8th Edition: William J. Duiker & Jackson J. Spielvogel
  152. Chemistry: An Atoms First Approach, 2nd Edition: Steven S. Zumdahl & Susan A. Zumdahl
  153. An Introduction to Management Science: Quantitative Approaches to Decision Making, 14th Edition: David R. Anderson & Dennis J. Sweeney & Thomas A. Williams & Jeffrey D. Camm & James J. Cochran
  154. Leading and Managing in Nursing, 7th Edition: Patricia S. Yoder-Wise
  155. Fundamental Accounting Principles, 24th Edition: John Wild & Ken Shaw
  156. The Leadership Experience, 6th Edition: Richard L. Daft
  157. Horngren's Cost Accounting: A Managerial Emphasis, 16th Edition: Srikant M. Datar & Madhav V. Rajan
  158. Health Promotion in Nursing Practice, 8th Edition: Carolyn L. Murdaugh & Mary Ann Parsons & Nola J. Pender
  159. Interviewing: Principles and Practices, 14th Edition: Charles Stewart & William Cash
  160. The Wiley Handbook of Problem-Based Learning, 1st Edition: Mahnaz Moallem & Woei Hung & Nada Dabbagh
  161. Astrobiology: Understanding Life in the Universe, 1st Edition: Charles S. Cockell
  162. Plant Physiology & Development, 6th Edition: Lincoln Taiz & Eduardo Zeiger & Ian M. Møller & Angus Murphy
  163. Texas Politics Today 2017-2018 Edition, 18th Edition: Jones & William Earl Maxwell & Ernest Crain & Morhea Lynn Davis & Christopher Wlezein
  164. American Government: Institutions and Policies, Brief Version, 13th Edition: James Q. Wilson & John J Dilulio & Meena Bose & Matthew S. Levendusky
  165. The SAGE Handbook of Diplomacy, 1st Edition: Costas M. Constantinou & Pauline Kerr & Paul Sharp
  166. Astrobiology: An Evolutionary Approach, 1st Edition: Vera M. Kolb
  167. 5G for the Connected World, 1st Edition: Devaki Chandramouli & Rainer Liebhart & Juho Pirskanen
  168. Astrobiology: From the Origins of Life to the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence, 1st Edition: Akihiko Yamagishi & Takeshi Kakegawa & Tomohiro Usui
  169. Medical Terminology: A Short Course, 8th Edition: Davi-Ellen Chabner
  170. Financial Accounting: An International Approach: Jagdish Kothari & Elisabetta Barone
  171. Conceptual Physics, 12th Global Edition: Paul G. Hewitt
  172. Diabetes and Exercise: From Pathophysiology to Clinical Implementation, 2nd Edition: Jane E. B. Reusch & Judith G. Regensteiner & Kerry J. Stewart & Aristidis Veves
  173. West's Pulmonary Pathophysiology, 9th Edition: John B. West & Andrew M. Luks
  174. Liver Pathophysiology: Therapies and Antioxidants, 1st Edition: Pablo Muriel
  175. Pediatric Trauma: Pathophysiology, Diagnosis, and Treatment, 2nd Edition: David E. Wesson & Bindi Naik-Mathuria
  176. Pathophysiology: The Biologic Basis for Disease in Adults and Children, 8th Edition: Kathryn L. McCance & Sue E. Huether
  177. Fitzpatrick's Dermatology, Ninth Edition, 2-Volume Set, 9th Edition: Sewon Kang
  178. Stroke: Pathophysiology, Diagnosis, and Management, 6th Edition: A David Mendelow & James C. Grotta & Gregory W Albers & Joseph P Broderick & Scott E Kasner & Eng H. Lo & Ralph L Sacco & Lawrence KS Wong
  179. Pathophysiology, 6th Edition: Jacquelyn L. Banasik
  180. The Heart of Mathematics: An Invitation to Effective Thinking, 4th Edition: Edward B. Burger
  181. The Strategic Management of Health Care Organizations, 8th Edition: Peter M. Ginter & W. Jack Duncan & Linda E. Swayne
  182. Pathophysiology of Disease: An Introduction to Clinical Medicine, 8th Edition: Gary D. Hammer & Stephen J. McPhee
  183. Astrobiology: An Introduction, 1st Edition: Alan Longstaff
  184. Handbook of Astrobiology, 1st Edition: Vera M. Kolb
  185. Pathophysiology: A Practical Approach, 3rd Edition: Lachel Story
  186. Crowley's An Introduction to Human Disease: Pathology and Pathophysiology Correlations, 10th Edition: Emily Reisner & Howard Reisner
  187. Hemodynamic Rounds: Interpretation of Cardiac Pathophysiology from Pressure Waveform Analysis, 4th Edition: Morton J. Kern & Michael J. Lim & James A. Goldstein
  188. Real Writing Essentials: Miriam Moore & Susan Anker
  189. The Visual Investor: How to Spot Market Trends, 2nd Edition: John J. Murphy
  190. Principles of Microeconomics, 8th Edition: N. Gregory Mankiw
  191. Stanfield's Essential Medical Terminology, 5th Edition: Nanna Cross & Dana McWay
  192. Taylor's Power Law: Order and Pattern in Nature, 1st Edition: R.A.J. Taylor
  193. Medical-Surgical Nursing: Assessment and Management of Clinical Problems, Single Volume 10th Edition: Sharon L. Lewis & Linda Bucher & Margaret M. Heitkemper & Mariann M. Harding & Jeffrey Kwong & Dottie Roberts
  194. Pharmacology for Nurses, 2nd Edition: Blaine T. Smith & Diane F. Pacitti
  195. Kozier & Erb's Fundamentals of Nursing, 10th Edition: Audrey T. Berman & Shirlee Snyder & Geralyn Frandsen
  196. Essentials of Medical Genetics for Nursing and Health Professionals: An Interprofessional Approach, 1st Edition: Laura M. Gunder McClary
  197. Indirect Care Handbook for Advanced Nursing Roles: Beyond the Bedside, 1st Edition: Patti Rager Zuzelo
  198. Medical-Surgical Nursing: Concepts & Practice, 3rd Edition: Holly Stromberg & Carol Dallred & Susan C. deWit
  199. Honan Focus on Adult Health: Medical-Surgical Nursing, 2nd Edition: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
  200. Human Resource Management: Functions, Applications, and Skill Development, 3rd Edition: Robert N. Lussier & John R. Hendon
  201. Environmental Science, 14th Edition: Eldon Enger & Bradley Smith
  202. School Public Relations for Student Success, 1st Edition: Edward H. Moore
  203. Human Resource Management, 15th Edition: Robert L. Mathis & John H. Jackson & Sean R. Valentine & Patricia Meglich
  204. Community/Public Health Nursing: Promoting the Health of Populations, 7th Edition: Mary A. Nies & Melanie McEwen
  205. Essentials of Nursing Research: Appraising Evidence for Nursing Practice, 9th Edition: Denise F. Polit & Cheryl T. Beck
  206. Community & Public Health Nursing: Promoting the Public's Health, 9th Edition: Cherie Rector
  207. Pocket Companion to Guyton and Hall Textbook of Medical Physiology, 13th Edition: John E. Hall
  208. Bates' Guide to Physical Examination and History Taking, 12th Edition: Lynn S. Bickley
  209. Interpersonal Communication: Everyday Encounters, 8th Edition: Julia T. Wood
  210. Understanding Medical Surgical Nursing, 5th Edition: Linda S Williams & Paula D Hopper
  211. Tall Building Design: Steel, Concrete, and Composite Systems, 1st Edition: Bungale S. Taranath
  212. A Topical Approach to Lifespan Development, 9th Edition: John Santrock
  213. Neuroscience, 6th Edition: Dale Purves & George J. Augustine & David Fitzpatrick
  214. The Cambridge Handbook of Expertise and Expert Performance, 2nd Edition: K. Anders Ericsson & Robert R. Hoffman & Aaron Kozbelt & A. Mark Williams
  215. Principles of Neural Science, 5th Edition: Eric R. Kandel & James H. Schwartz & Thomas M. Jessell & Steven A. Siegelbaum & A. J. Hudspeth
  216. Fundamentals of Investments: Valuation and Management, 8th Edition: Bradford Jordan & Thomas Miller & Steve Dolvin
  217. Dimensional Analysis for Meds: Refocusing on Essential Metric Calculation, 5th Edition: Anna M. Curren
  218. Aircraft Systems: Instruments, Communications, Navigation, and Control (Wiley - IEEE), 1st Edition: Chris Binns
  219. Diagnostic Gynecologic and Obstetric Pathology, 3rd Edition: Christopher P. Crum & Kenneth R. Lee & Marisa R. Nucci & Scott R. Granter
  220. Human Resource Management, 10th Edition: Raymond Noe & John Hollenbeck & Barry Gerhart & Patrick Wright
  221. Paralegal Today: The Essentials, 6th Edition: Roger LeRoy Miller & Mary Meinzinger
  222. Biology: How Life Works, 2nd Edition: James R. Morris & Daniel L. Hartl & Andrew H. Knoll & Robert A. Lue
  223. Automotive Electricity and Electronics Tasksheet Manual: CDX Master Automotive Technician Series: David M. Jones & Kirk VanGelder
  224. Principles of Life, 2nd Edition: David M. Hillis & David Sadava & Richard W. Hill & Mary V. Price
  225. Shelly Cashman Series Microsoft Office 365 & Office 2016: Intermediate, 1st Edition: Steven M. Freund & Mary Z. Last & Philip J. Pratt & Susan L. Sebok & Misty E. Vermaat
  226. Black's Veterinary Dictionary, 22nd Edition: Edward Boden & Anthony Andrews
  227. McGraw-Hill's Taxation of Individuals and Business Entities,2019 Edition, 10th Edition: Brian Spilker & Benjamin Ayers & John Barrick & Edmund Outslay & John Robinson & Connie Weaver & Ronald Worsham
  228. Calculate with Confidence, 7th Edition: Deborah C. Gray Morris
  229. Macroeconomics: Policy and Practice, 2nd Edition: Frederic S. Mishkin
  230. Advanced Structural Analysis with MATLAB®, 1st Edition: Srinivasan Chandrasekaran
  231. Structural Analysis of Historical Constructions: An Interdisciplinary Approach, 1st Edition: Rafael Aguilar & Daniel Torrealva & Susana Moreira & Miguel A. Pando & Luis F. Ramos
  232. Accounting, 25th edition: Carl S. Warren & James M. Reeve & Jonathan Duchac
  233. Structural Reliability Analysis and Prediction, 3rd Edition: Robert E. Melchers & Andre T. Beck
  234. Unified Design of Steel Structures, 3rd Edition: Louis Geschwindner & Judy Liu & Charles Carter
  235. Design and Construction of Modern Steel Railway Bridges, 2nd Edition: John F. Unsworth
  236. Ultimate Limit State Analysis and Design of Plated Structures, 2nd Edition: Jeom Kee Paik
  237. Financial Markets, SME Financing and Emerging Economies, 1st Edition: Giusy Chesini & Elisa Giaretta & Andrea Paltrinieri
  238. European Psychiatric/Mental Health Nursing in the 21st Century: A Person-Centred Evidence-Based Approach, 1st Edition: José Carlos Santos & John R. Cutcliffe
  239. Financial Markets & Institutions, 9th Global Edition: Stanley Eakins Frederic Mishkin
  240. Liaisons, Student Edition: An Introduction to French, 3rd Edition: Wynne Wong & Stacey Weber-Fève & Bill VanPatten
  241. Financial Markets and Institutions, 8th Edition: Frederic S. Mishkin & Stanley Eakins
  242. Strategic Management: Concepts and Cases: Competitiveness and Globalization, 13th Edition: Michael A. Hitt & R. Duane Ireland & Robert E. Hoskisson
  243. Foundations of Financial Markets and Institutions: Pearson New International Edition, 4th Edition: Frank J Fabozzi & Franco P. Modigliani & Frank J. Jones
  244. Financial Institutions Management: A Risk Management Approach, 9th Edition: Anthony Saunders & Marcia Cornett
  245. Neuroanatomy in Clinical Context: An Atlas of Structures, Sections, Systems, and Syndromes, 9th Edition: Duane E. Haines
  246. Structural Analysis and Design of Process Equipment, 3rd Edition: Maan H. Jawad & James R. Farr
  247. Introduction to Aircraft Structural Analysis, 3rd Edition: T.H.G. Megson
  248. Business Law Today, Standard: Text & Summarized Cases, 11th Edition: Roger LeRoy Miller
  249. Steel Design, 5th Edition: William T. Segui
  250. Psychiatric & Mental Health Nursing for Canadian Practice, 4th Edition: Dr. Wendy Austin & Cindy Ann Peternelj-Taylor & Diane Kunyk & Mary Ann Boyd
  251. Economics of Strategy, 7th Edition: David Dranove & David Besanko & Mark Shanley & Scott Schaefer
  252. Financial Markets and Institutions, 6th Edition: Anthony Saunders & Marcia Cornett
  253. Statistics, 13th Edition: James T. McClave & Terry T. Sincich
  254. Pocket Companion for Physical Examination and Health Assessment, 7th Edition: Carolyn Jarvis
  255. Physical Examination and Health Assessment, 7th Edition: Carolyn Jarvis
  256. Integrating Work Health and Safety into Construction Project Management, 1st Edition: Helen Lingard & Ron Wakefield
  257. Hopkins' Nonprofit Law Dictionary, 1st Edition: Bruce R. Hopkins
  258. An Econometric Model of the US Economy: Structural Analysis in 56 Equations, 1st Edition: John J. Heim
  259. Fractography and Failure Analysis, 1st Edition: Jorge Luis González-Velázquez
  260. Get Fit, Stay Well!: Brief Edition, 4th Edition: Janet L. Hopson & Rebecca J. Donatelle & Tanya R. Littrell
  261. Statistics, 12th Edition: James T. McClave & Terry T Sincich
  262. Statistics, Global Edition, 13th Edition: James Bohan
  263. Matrix Methods of Structural Analysis, 1st Edition: Praveen Nagarajan
  264. Public Health Research Methods, 1st Edition: Greg S. Guest & Emily E. Namey
  265. Asking the Right Questions: A Guide to Critical Thinking, 12th Edition: M. Neil Browne & Stuart M. Keeley
  266. Criminal Justice in Action, 10th Edition: Larry K. Gaines & Roger LeRoy Miller
  267. Internal Auditing: Assurance & Advisory Services, 4th Edition: Urton Anderson & Michael J. Head & Sridhar Ramamoorti & Cris Riddle & Mark Salamasick & Paul Sobel
  268. Fundamentals of Human Resource Management: Functions, Applications, Skill Development, 1st Edition: Robert N. Lussier & John R. Hendon
  269. Steel Structures: Practical Design Studies, 4th Edition: Hassan Al Nageim
  270. Human Anatomy & Physiology, 11th Edition: Elaine N. Marieb & Katja N. Hoehn
  271. Clinical Neuropsychology of Emotion, 1st Edition: Yana Suchy
  272. Traffic & Highway Engineering, 4th Edition: Nicholas J. Garber & Lester A. Hoel
  273. Medical Emergencies in Dental Practice, 1st Edition: Orrett E. Ogle & Harry Dym & Robert J. Weinstock
  274. Auditing & Assurance Services, 7th Edition: Timothy Louwers & Allen Blay & David Sinason & Jerry Strawser & Jay Thibodeau
  275. An Introduction to Statistical Methods and Data Analysis, 7th Edition: R. Lyman Ott & Micheal T. Longnecker
  276. Structural Analysis: In Theory and Practice, 1st Edition: Alan Williams
  277. Project Management for Facility Constructions: A Guide for Engineers and Architects, 2nd Edition: Alberto De Marco
  278. Investigating Social Problems, 2nd Edition: A. Javier Trevino
  279. Auditing, Assurance Services, and Forensics: A Comprehensive Approach, 1st Edition: Felix I. Lessambo
  280. Basic Guide to Medical Emergencies in the Dental Practice, 2nd Edition: Philip Jevon
  281. Medical Emergencies in the Dental Office, 7th Edition: Stanley F. Malamed
  282. Radiology for Undergraduate Finals and Foundation Years: Key Topics and Question Types, 1st Edition: Tristan Barrett & Nadeem Shaida & Ashley Shaw
  283. Hearing: Anatomy, Physiology, and Disorders of the Auditory System, 3rd Edition: Aage Moller
  284. Basics of Abdominal, Gynaecological, Obstetrics and Small Parts Ultrasound, 1st Edition: Rajendra K. Diwakar
  285. Pediatric Critical Care Medicine: Volume 2: Respiratory, Cardiovascular and Central Nervous Systems, 2nd Edition: Derek S. Wheeler & Hector R. Wong & Thomas P. Shanley
  286. Pediatric Critical Care Medicine: Volume 1: Care of the Critically Ill or Injured Child, 2nd Edition: Derek S. Wheeler & Hector R. Wong & Thomas P. Shanley
  287. Computers as Components: Principles of Embedded Computing System Design, 4th Edition: Marilyn Wolf
  288. Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing: Concepts of Care in Evidence-Based Practice, 8th Edition: Mary C. Townsend
  289. Cardiac Arrhythmia Management: A Practical Guide for Nurses and Allied Professionals, 1st Edition: Angela Tsiperfal & Linda K. Ottoboni & Salwa Beheiry & Amin Al-Ahmad & Andrea Natale & Paul J. Wang
  290. Color Atlas of Dermatopathology, 1st Edition: Jane M. Grant-Kels
  291. Obstetrics and Gynecology, 7th Edition: Charles R. B. Beckmann & William Herbert & Douglas Laube & Frank Ling & Roger Smith
  292. Primary Care: A Collaborative Practice, 5th Edition: Terry Mahan Buttaro & Patricia Polgar-Bailey & Joanne Sandberg-Cook & JoAnn Trybulski
  293. Pediatric Primary Care, 6th Edition: Catherine E. Burns & Ardys M. Dunn & Margaret A. Brady & Nancy Barber Starr & Catherine G. Blosser & Dawn Lee Garzon Maaks
  294. Design of Highway Bridges: An LRFD Approach, 3rd Edition: Richard M. Barker & Jay A. Puckett
  295. Atlas of Interstitial Lung Disease Pathology: Pathology with High Resolution CT Correlations, 1st Edition: Andrew Churg
  296. Atlas of Dermatopathology: Practical Differential Diagnosis by Clinicopathologic Pattern, 1st Edition: Gunter Burg & Werner Kempf & Heinz Kutzner & Josef Feit & Laszlo Karai
  297. Atlas of Dermatopathology: Tumors, Nevi, and Cysts, 1st Edition: Gunter Burg & Heinz Kutzner & Werner Kempf & Josef Feit & Bruce R. Smoller
  298. Atlas of Essential Dermatopathology, 2013th Edition: Kasia S. Masterpol & Andrea Primiani & Lyn M. Duncan
  299. Molecular Anatomic Imaging: PET-CT and SPECT-CT Integrated Modality Imaging, 2nd Edition: Gustav K. von Schulthess
  300. Gray's Anatomy for Students, 4th Edition: Richard Drake & A. Wayne Vogl & Adam W. M. Mitchell
  301. Taylor's Clinical Nursing Skills: A Nursing Process Approach, 5th Edition: Pamela Lynn
  302. Structural Concrete: Theory and Design, 6th Edition: M. Nadim Hassoun & Akthem Al-Manaseer
  303. Child Abuse and Neglect, 2nd Edition: Monica L. McCoy & Stefanie M. Keen
  304. Child Abuse and Neglect: Perceptions, Psychological Consequences and Coping Strategies: Michelle Martinez
  305. C++ Templates: The Complete Guide, 2nd Edition: David Vandevoorde & Nicolai M. Josuttis & Douglas Gregor
  306. Problem Solving with C++, 9th Edition: Walter Savitch
  307. Wiley Not-for-Profit GAAP 2018: Interpretation and Application of Generally Accepted Accounting Principles, 2nd Edition: Richard F. Larkin & Marie DiTommaso
  308. Social Problems: Community, Policy, and Social Action, 6th Edition: Anna Y. Leon-Guerrero
  309. Anderson's Business Law and the Legal Environment, Comprehensive Volume, 23rd Edition: David P. Twomey & Marianne M. Jennings & Stephanie M Greene
  310. Physician's Guide: Understanding and Working With Integrated Case Managers, 1st Edition: Roger G. Kathol & Katherine Hobbs Knutson & Peter J. Dehnel
  311. Management of Construction Projects: A Constructor's Perspective, 2nd Edition: John E. Schaufelberger & Len Holm
  312. International GAAP 2019, 1st Edition: Ernst & Young LLP
  313. Wiley Interpretation and Application of IFRS Standards, 1st Edition: PKF International Ltd
  314. BIM and Big Data for Construction Cost Management, 1st Edition: Weisheng Lu & Chi Cheung Lai & Tung Tse
  315. Social Media Communication, 2nd Edition: Jeremy Harris Lipschultz
  316. International Financial Management, 13th Edition: Jeff Madura
  317. Criminology: A Sociological Understanding, 7th Edition: Steven E Barkan
  318. Research Methods for Education, 1st Edition: Gregory J. Privitera & Lynn Ahlgrim-Delzell
  319. Cone Beam Computed Tomography in Orthodontics: Indications, Insights, and Innovations, 1st Edition: Sunil D. Kapila
  320. Applied Probabilistic Calculus for Financial Engineering: An Introduction Using R, 1st Edition: Bertram K. C. Chan
  321. Spencer's Pathology of the Lung: 2 Part Set, 6th Edition: Philip Hasleton & Douglas B. Flieder
  322. Project Management for Facility Constructions: A Guide for Engineers and Architects, 2011th Edition: Alberto De Marco
  323. Medical Ethics: Accounts of Ground-Breaking Cases, 8th Edition: Gregory Pence
  324. Gunderson & Tepper’s Clinical Radiation Oncology, 5th Edition: Joel E. Tepper
  325. Casino Operations Management, 2nd Edition: Jim Kilby & Jim Fox & Anthony F. Lucas
  326. Handbook of Clinical Psychopharmacology for Therapists, 8th Edition: John D. Preston & John H. O'Neal & Mary C. Talaga & Bret A. Moore
  327. Business Essentials, 12th Edition: Ronald J. Ebert & Ricky W. Griffin
  328. Electronic Circuits: Fundamentals and Applications, 5th Edition: Mike Tooley
  329. The Routledge Companion to Consumer Behavior, 1st Edition: Michael R. Solomon & Tina M. Lowrey
  330. Empowerment Series: Generalist Practice with Organizations and Communities, 7th Edition: Karen K. Kirst-Ashman & Grafton H. Hull
  331. Structural Analysis, 9th Edition: Russell C. Hibbeler
  332. Principles of Auditing & Other Assurance Services, 20th Edition: Ray Whittington & Kurt Pany
  333. Master the Boards USMLE Step 2 CK, 5th Edition: Conrad Fischer
  334. Value Management of Construction Projects, 2nd Edition: John Kelly & Steven Male & Drummond Graham
  335. Fundamental Accounting Principles, 22nd Edition: John Wild & Ken Shaw & Barbara Chiappetta
  336. Time Series Econometrics: A Concise Introduction, 1st Edition: Terence C. Mills
  337. Philosophy of Mathematics and Economics: Image, Context and Perspective, 1st Edition: Thomas A. Boylan & Paschal F. O'Gorman
  338. Elementary Number Theory with Programming, 1st Edition: Marty Lewinter & Jeanine Meyer
  339. Motor Learning and Control: Concepts and Applications, 11th Edition: Richard Magill & David Anderson
  340. Construction Project Management, 6th Edition: S. Keoki Sears & Glenn A. Sears & Richard H. Clough & Jerald L. Rounds & Robert O. Segner
  341. Fundamentals of Human Resource Management, 6th Edition: Raymond Noe & John Hollenbeck & Barry Gerhart & Patrick Wright
  342. Leadership: A Communication Perspective, 7th Edition: Craig E. Johnson & Michael Z. Hackman
  343. Managing Cultural Differences: Global Leadership for the 21st Century, 10th Edition: Neil Remington Abramson & Robert T. Moran
  344. Deep Brain Stimulation Programming: Mechanisms, Principles and Practice, 2nd Edition: Erwin B Montgomery
  345. International Business: Competing in the Global Marketplace, 12th Edition: Charles Hill & G. Tomas M. Hult
  346. International Business: Competing in the Global Marketplace, 10th Edition: Charles Hill
  347. Theories of Human Communication, 11th Edition: Stephen W. Littlejohn & Karen A. Foss & John G. Oetzel
  348. Designing the User Interface: Strategies for Effective Human-Computer Interaction, 6th Edition: Ben Shneiderman & Catherine Plaisant & Maxine Cohen
  349. Quality Management in Construction Projects, 2nd Edition: Abdul Razzak Rumane
  350. Skills Management: New Applications, New Questions, 1st Edition: Alain Roger & Didier Vinot
  351. Pig Disease Identification and Diagnosis Guide: A Farm Handbook, 1st Edition: Steven McOrist
submitted by bookseller10 to eTextbooks [link] [comments]

Mega eTextbooks release thread (part-27)! Find your textbooks here between $5-$25 :)

Please find the list below:
  1. Managerial Economics and Strategy, Global 2nd Edition: Jeffrey M. Perloff & James A. Brander
  2. Information Technology and Organizational Learning: Managing Behavioral Change in the Digital Age, 3rd Edition: Arthur M. Langer
  3. Human Anatomy & Physiology Laboratory Manual: Elaine N. Marieb & Lori A. Smith
  4. Principles of Molecular Virology, 6th Edition: Alan J. Cann
  5. The Wiley Handbook of Global Educational Reform, 1st Edition: Kenneth J. Saltman & Alexander J. Means
  6. Prescott's Microbiology, 10th Edition: Joanne Willey & Linda Sherwood & Christopher J. Woolverton
  7. Systems Analysis and Design, 6th Edition: Alan Dennis & Barbara Haley Wixom & Roberta M. Roth
  8. Love and Intimacy in Online Cross-Cultural Relationships: The Power of Imagination, 1st Edition: Wilasinee Pananakhonsab
  9. The Human Organism: Explorations in Biological Anthropology, 1st Edition: Elizabeth Weiss
  10. Nursing Theories and Nursing Practice, 4th Edition: Marlaine Smith & Marilyn Parker
  11. Statistics for Nursing: A Practical Approach, 3rd Edition: Elizabeth Heavey
  12. Life Cycle Assessment of Energy Systems: Closing the Ethical Loophole of Social Sustainability, English Edition: Nicholas Sakellariou
  13. A Practical Guide to Welding Solutions: Overcoming Technical and Material-Specific Issues: Robert W. Messler
  14. Programming the World Wide Web, 8th Edition: Robert W. Sebesta
  15. Maternal and Child Health Nursing: Care of the Childbearing and Childrearing Family, 8th Edition: JoAnne Silbert-Flagg & Adele Pillitteri
  16. Cengage Advantage Books: Culture Counts: A Concise Introduction to Cultural Anthropology, 4th Edition: Serena Nanda & Richard L. Warms
  17. International Management Behavior: Global and Sustainable Leadership, 7th Edition: Henry W. Lane & Martha L. Maznevski
  18. Cultural Competence in Health Education and Health Promotion, 2nd Edition: Miguel A. P¿rez & Raffy R. Luquis
  19. Sub-seasonal to Seasonal Prediction: The Gap Between Weather and Climate Forecasting, 1st Edition: Andrew Robertson & Frederic Vitart
  20. Retail Analytics: Integrated Forecasting and Inventory Management for Perishable Products in Retailing, 2015th Edition: Anna-Lena Sachs
  21. Molecular and Cell Biology of Cancer: When Cells Break the Rules and Hijack Their Own Planet, 1st Edition: Rita Fior & Rita Zilhão
  22. Qualitative Marketing Research: Understanding Consumer Behaviour, 1st Edition: Dominika Maison
  23. Communicating in Small Groups: Principles and Practices, 11th Edition: Steven A. Beebe & John T. Masterson
  24. America's Courts and the Criminal Justice System, 13th Edition: David W. Neubauer & Henry F. Fradella
  25. Services Marketing: Concepts, Strategies & Cases, 4th Edition: K. Douglas Hoffman & John E.G. Bateson
  26. Kinematics, Dynamics, and Design of Machinery, 3rd Edition: Kenneth J. Waldron & Gary L. Kinzel & Sunil K. Agrawal
  27. Essentials of Cultural Anthropology: A Toolkit for a Global Age, 2nd Edition: Kenneth J. Guest
  28. An Anthropology of Learning: On Nested Frictions in Cultural Ecologies, 2015th Edition: Cathrine Hasse
  29. Health Promotion Programs: From Theory to Practice, 1st Edition: Society for Public Health Education (SOPHE) & Carl I. Fertman & Diane D. Allensworth
  30. The American Lab: An Insider’s History of the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory: C. Bruce Tarter
  31. Food Security and Climate Change, 1st Edition: Shyam Singh Yadav & Robert J. Redden & Jerry L. Hatfield & Andreas W. Ebert & Danny Hunter
  32. Health Assessment for Nursing Practice, 6th Edition: Susan F. Wilson & Jean Foret Giddens
  33. Tobacco Smoking Addiction: Epidemiology, Genetics, Mechanisms, and Treatment: Ming D. Li
  34. Cultural Anthropology: Asking Questions About Humanity, 2nd Edition: Robert L. Welsch & Luis A. Vivanco
  35. Accounting for Governmental & Nonprofit Entities, 17th Edition: Jacqueline Reck & Suzanne Lowensohn & Earl Wilson
  36. Addiction and Change: How Addictions Develop and Addicted People Recover, 2nd Edition: Carlo C. DiClemente
  37. Culture and the Politics of Welfare: Exploring Societal Values and Social Choices: J. Hudson & N. Jo & A. Keung
  38. Essential University Physics: Volume 2, 3rd Edition: Richard Wolfson
  39. Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association, 6th Edition: American Psychological Association
  40. Concepts of Programming Languages, 11th Global Edition: Robert Sebesta
  41. Through the Lens of Anthropology: An Introduction to Human Evolution and Culture, 1st Edition: Robert J. Muckle & Laura Tubelle de González
  42. Practical Research: Planning and Design, 11th Edition: Paul D. Leedy & Jeanne Ellis Ormrod
  43. Environment: The Science Behind the Stories, 6th Edition: Jay H. Withgott & Matthew Laposata
  44. Environment: The Science Behind the Stories, 3rd Canadian Edition: Jay H. Withgott & Matthew Laposata & Barbara Murck
  45. Applied Calculus for the Managerial, Life, and Social Sciences: A Brief Approach, 10th Edition: Soo T. Tan
  46. Essential Environment: The Science Behind the Stories, 5th Edition: Jay H. Withgott & Matthew Laposata
  47. Leadership and School Quality: Michael DiPaola & Wayne K. Hoy
  48. Group Dynamics, 7th Edition: Donelson R. Forsyth
  49. Practitioners' Guide to Human Rights Law in Armed Conflict, 1st Edition: Daragh Murray & Elizabeth Wilmshurst & Francoise Hampson & Charles Garraway & Noam Lubell & Dapo Akande
  50. Educational Administration: Theory, Research, and Practice, 9th Edition: Wayne Hoy & Cecil Miskel
  51. Group Dynamics for Teams, 5th Edition: Daniel J. Levi
  52. Human Behavior and the Social Environment: Shifting Paradigms in Essential Knowledge for Social Work Practice, 6th Edition: Joe M. Schriver
  53. Economics of Development, 7th Edition: Dwight H. Perkins & Steven Radelet & David L. Lindauer & Steven A. Block
  54. Carbon Nanomaterials for Bioimaging, Bioanalysis, and Therapy, English Edition:por Yuen Y. Hui & Huang-Cheng Chang & Haifeng Dong & Xueji Zhang
  55. Canadian Essentials of Nursing Research, 3rd Edition: Carmen G. Loiselle & Joanne Profetto-McGrath & Denise F. Polit & Cheryl T. Beck
  56. Rock Dynamics: From Research to Engineering: Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Rock Dynamics and Applications, 1st Edition: Haibo Li & Jianchun Li & Qianbing Zhang & Jian Zhao
  57. Organic Chemistry As a Second Language: Second Semester Topics, 4th Edition: David R. Klein
  58. International Dimensions of Organizational Behavior, 5th Edition: Nancy J. Adler & Allison Gundersen
  59. An Introduction to Group Work Practice, 8th Edition: Ronald W. Toseland & Robert F. Rivas
  60. Bacterial Therapy of Cancer: Methods and Protocols, 1st Edition: Robert Hoffman
  61. Design Optimization of Fluid Machinery: Applying Computational Fluid Dynamics and Numerical Optimization, 1st Edition: Kwang-Yong Kim & Abdus Samad & Ernesto Benini
  62. Children, 13th Edition: John W. Santrock
  63. Retail Supply Chain Management, 2nd Edition: James B. Ayers & Mary Ann Odegaard
  64. Research Methods for Business Students, 7th Edition: Mark N.K. Saunders & Philip Lewis & Adrian Thornhill
  65. Fundamental Principles of Law and Economics, 1st Edition: Alan Devlin
  66. Principles of Economics, A Streamlined Approach with Connect, 3rd Edition: Robert Frank & Ben Bernanke & Kate Antonovics & Ori Heffetz
  67. Mastering AutoCAD 2019 and AutoCAD LT 2019, 1st Edition: George Omura & Brian C. Benton
  68. Finite Mathematics for Business, Economics, Life Sciences and Social Sciences, Global 13th Edition: Raymond A. Barnett & Michael R. Ziegler & Karl E. Byleen
  69. Managerial Accounting: Tools for Business Decision Making, 6th Edition: Jerry J. Weygandt & Paul D. Kimmel & Donald E. Kieso
  70. Modern Principles of Economics, 3rd Edition: Tyler Cowen & Alex Tabarrok
  71. AutoCAD 3D Modeling: Exercise Workbook: Steve Heather
  72. AutoCAD For Dummies, 17th Edition: Bill Fane
  73. Health Promotion in School: Theory, Practice and Clinical Implications, UK Edition: Antonio Iudici M.D.
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  75. Culture′s Consequences: Comparing Values, Behaviors, Institutions and Organizations Across Nations, 2nd Edition: Geert Hofstede
  76. Retailing Management, 9th Edition: Michael Levy & Barton A Weitz & Dhruv Grewal
  77. Cooking: The Quintessential Art: Hervé This & Pierre Gagnaire & M. B. DeBevoise
  78. Cancer Stem Cells: Methods and Protocols, 1st Edition: Gianpaolo Papaccio & Vincenzo Desiderio
  79. College Algebra, 3rd Edition: John W. Coburn & Jeremy P. Coffelt
  80. Algebra and Trigonometry: Real Mathematics, Real People, 7th Edition: Ron Larson
  81. Microbiology Fundamentals: A Clinical Approach, 2nd Edition: Marjorie Kelly Cowan
  82. Culture and Values: A Survey of the Western Humanities, 8th Edition: Lawrence S. Cunningham & John J. Reich & Lois Fichner-Rathus
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  84. Capitalist Family Values: Gender, Work, and Corporate Culture at Boeing: Polly Reed Myers
  85. Practical Homicide Investigation: Tactics, Procedures, and Forensic Techniques, 5th Edition: Vernon J. Geberth
  86. Research Methods For Business: A Skill Building Approach, 7th Edition: Uma Sekaran & Roger Bougie
  87. Fundamentals of Financial Management, 15th Edition: Eugene F. Brigham & Joel F. Houston
  88. Business Statistics: A First Course, 7th Global Edition: David M. Levine & Kathryn A. Szabat & David F. Stephan
  89. The SAGE Handbook of Qualitative Business and Management Research Methods: History and Traditions, 1st Edition: Cathy Cassell & Ann L Cunliffe & Gina Grandy
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  92. Goldman-Cecil Medicine, 25th Edition: Lee Goldman & Andrew I. Schafer
  93. Material Culture in Russia and the USSR: Things, Values, Identities, 1st Edition: Graham H. Roberts
  94. Cognitive Psychology: Connecting Mind, Research, and Everyday Experience, 5th Edition: E. Bruce Goldstein
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  96. Transformations: Women, Gender and Psychology, 3rd Edition: Mary Crawford
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  99. The Wiley Handbook of Action Research in Education, 1st Edition: Craig A. Mertler
  100. Principles of Virology, 4th Edition: S. Jane Flint & Vincent R. Racaniello & Glenn F. Rall & Anna Marie Skalka
  101. Pilbeam's Mechanical Ventilation: Physiological and Clinical Applications, 5th Edition: J M Cairo
  102. Polyoxometalates: Properties, Structure and Synthesis, UK Edition: Aaron P. Roberts
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  115. A New Psychology of Women: Gender, Culture, and Ethnicity, 4th Edition: Hilary M. Lips
  116. Cognitive Psychology: Connecting Mind, Research, and Everyday Experience, 4th Edition: E. Bruce Goldstein
  117. Life-Span Development, 17th Edition: John Santrock
  118. Emerging Genres in New Media Environments, 1st Edition: Carolyn R. Miller & Ashley R. Kelly
  119. Polyunsaturated Fatty Acid Metabolism, 1st Edition: Graham C. Burdge
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  127. Microeconomics, 7th Global Edition: Jeffrey M. Perloff
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  136. Psychology of Women and Gender, 1st Edition: Miriam Liss & Kate Richmond & Mindy J. Erchull
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  140. The Practice of Public Relations, 13th Global Edition: Fraser P. Seitel
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  149. Positive Psychology: The Science of Happiness and Flourishing, 2nd Edition: William C. Compton & Edward Hoffman
  150. Essentials of Mechanical Ventilation, 3rd Edition: Dean Hess & Robert Kacmarek
  151. The Essential World History, Volume I: To 1800, 8th Edition: William J. Duiker & Jackson J. Spielvogel
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  155. Fundamental Accounting Principles, 24th Edition: John Wild & Ken Shaw
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  165. The SAGE Handbook of Diplomacy, 1st Edition: Costas M. Constantinou & Pauline Kerr & Paul Sharp
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  167. 5G for the Connected World, 1st Edition: Devaki Chandramouli & Rainer Liebhart & Juho Pirskanen
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  169. Medical Terminology: A Short Course, 8th Edition: Davi-Ellen Chabner
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  176. Pathophysiology: The Biologic Basis for Disease in Adults and Children, 8th Edition: Kathryn L. McCance & Sue E. Huether
  177. Fitzpatrick's Dermatology, Ninth Edition, 2-Volume Set, 9th Edition: Sewon Kang
  178. Stroke: Pathophysiology, Diagnosis, and Management, 6th Edition: A David Mendelow & James C. Grotta & Gregory W Albers & Joseph P Broderick & Scott E Kasner & Eng H. Lo & Ralph L Sacco & Lawrence KS Wong
  179. Pathophysiology, 6th Edition: Jacquelyn L. Banasik
  180. The Heart of Mathematics: An Invitation to Effective Thinking, 4th Edition: Edward B. Burger
  181. The Strategic Management of Health Care Organizations, 8th Edition: Peter M. Ginter & W. Jack Duncan & Linda E. Swayne
  182. Pathophysiology of Disease: An Introduction to Clinical Medicine, 8th Edition: Gary D. Hammer & Stephen J. McPhee
  183. Astrobiology: An Introduction, 1st Edition: Alan Longstaff
  184. Handbook of Astrobiology, 1st Edition: Vera M. Kolb
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  190. Principles of Microeconomics, 8th Edition: N. Gregory Mankiw
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  192. Taylor's Power Law: Order and Pattern in Nature, 1st Edition: R.A.J. Taylor
  193. Medical-Surgical Nursing: Assessment and Management of Clinical Problems, Single Volume 10th Edition: Sharon L. Lewis & Linda Bucher & Margaret M. Heitkemper & Mariann M. Harding & Jeffrey Kwong & Dottie Roberts
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  198. Medical-Surgical Nursing: Concepts & Practice, 3rd Edition: Holly Stromberg & Carol Dallred & Susan C. deWit
  199. Honan Focus on Adult Health: Medical-Surgical Nursing, 2nd Edition: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
  200. Human Resource Management: Functions, Applications, and Skill Development, 3rd Edition: Robert N. Lussier & John R. Hendon
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  207. Pocket Companion to Guyton and Hall Textbook of Medical Physiology, 13th Edition: John E. Hall
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  211. Tall Building Design: Steel, Concrete, and Composite Systems, 1st Edition: Bungale S. Taranath
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  214. The Cambridge Handbook of Expertise and Expert Performance, 2nd Edition: K. Anders Ericsson & Robert R. Hoffman & Aaron Kozbelt & A. Mark Williams
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  216. Fundamentals of Investments: Valuation and Management, 8th Edition: Bradford Jordan & Thomas Miller & Steve Dolvin
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  218. Aircraft Systems: Instruments, Communications, Navigation, and Control (Wiley - IEEE), 1st Edition: Chris Binns
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  221. Paralegal Today: The Essentials, 6th Edition: Roger LeRoy Miller & Mary Meinzinger
  222. Biology: How Life Works, 2nd Edition: James R. Morris & Daniel L. Hartl & Andrew H. Knoll & Robert A. Lue
  223. Automotive Electricity and Electronics Tasksheet Manual: CDX Master Automotive Technician Series: David M. Jones & Kirk VanGelder
  224. Principles of Life, 2nd Edition: David M. Hillis & David Sadava & Richard W. Hill & Mary V. Price
  225. Shelly Cashman Series Microsoft Office 365 & Office 2016: Intermediate, 1st Edition: Steven M. Freund & Mary Z. Last & Philip J. Pratt & Susan L. Sebok & Misty E. Vermaat
  226. Black's Veterinary Dictionary, 22nd Edition: Edward Boden & Anthony Andrews
  227. McGraw-Hill's Taxation of Individuals and Business Entities,2019 Edition, 10th Edition: Brian Spilker & Benjamin Ayers & John Barrick & Edmund Outslay & John Robinson & Connie Weaver & Ronald Worsham
  228. Calculate with Confidence, 7th Edition: Deborah C. Gray Morris
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  230. Advanced Structural Analysis with MATLAB®, 1st Edition: Srinivasan Chandrasekaran
  231. Structural Analysis of Historical Constructions: An Interdisciplinary Approach, 1st Edition: Rafael Aguilar & Daniel Torrealva & Susana Moreira & Miguel A. Pando & Luis F. Ramos
  232. Accounting, 25th edition: Carl S. Warren & James M. Reeve & Jonathan Duchac
  233. Structural Reliability Analysis and Prediction, 3rd Edition: Robert E. Melchers & Andre T. Beck
  234. Unified Design of Steel Structures, 3rd Edition: Louis Geschwindner & Judy Liu & Charles Carter
  235. Design and Construction of Modern Steel Railway Bridges, 2nd Edition: John F. Unsworth
  236. Ultimate Limit State Analysis and Design of Plated Structures, 2nd Edition: Jeom Kee Paik
  237. Financial Markets, SME Financing and Emerging Economies, 1st Edition: Giusy Chesini & Elisa Giaretta & Andrea Paltrinieri
  238. European Psychiatric/Mental Health Nursing in the 21st Century: A Person-Centred Evidence-Based Approach, 1st Edition: José Carlos Santos & John R. Cutcliffe
  239. Financial Markets & Institutions, 9th Global Edition: Stanley Eakins Frederic Mishkin
  240. Liaisons, Student Edition: An Introduction to French, 3rd Edition: Wynne Wong & Stacey Weber-Fève & Bill VanPatten
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  242. Strategic Management: Concepts and Cases: Competitiveness and Globalization, 13th Edition: Michael A. Hitt & R. Duane Ireland & Robert E. Hoskisson
  243. Foundations of Financial Markets and Institutions: Pearson New International Edition, 4th Edition: Frank J Fabozzi & Franco P. Modigliani & Frank J. Jones
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  245. Neuroanatomy in Clinical Context: An Atlas of Structures, Sections, Systems, and Syndromes, 9th Edition: Duane E. Haines
  246. Structural Analysis and Design of Process Equipment, 3rd Edition: Maan H. Jawad & James R. Farr
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  248. Business Law Today, Standard: Text & Summarized Cases, 11th Edition: Roger LeRoy Miller
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  251. Economics of Strategy, 7th Edition: David Dranove & David Besanko & Mark Shanley & Scott Schaefer
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  254. Pocket Companion for Physical Examination and Health Assessment, 7th Edition: Carolyn Jarvis
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  256. Integrating Work Health and Safety into Construction Project Management, 1st Edition: Helen Lingard & Ron Wakefield
  257. Hopkins' Nonprofit Law Dictionary, 1st Edition: Bruce R. Hopkins
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  269. Steel Structures: Practical Design Studies, 4th Edition: Hassan Al Nageim
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  272. Traffic & Highway Engineering, 4th Edition: Nicholas J. Garber & Lester A. Hoel
  273. Medical Emergencies in Dental Practice, 1st Edition: Orrett E. Ogle & Harry Dym & Robert J. Weinstock
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  275. An Introduction to Statistical Methods and Data Analysis, 7th Edition: R. Lyman Ott & Micheal T. Longnecker
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  277. Project Management for Facility Constructions: A Guide for Engineers and Architects, 2nd Edition: Alberto De Marco
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  279. Auditing, Assurance Services, and Forensics: A Comprehensive Approach, 1st Edition: Felix I. Lessambo
  280. Basic Guide to Medical Emergencies in the Dental Practice, 2nd Edition: Philip Jevon
  281. Medical Emergencies in the Dental Office, 7th Edition: Stanley F. Malamed
  282. Radiology for Undergraduate Finals and Foundation Years: Key Topics and Question Types, 1st Edition: Tristan Barrett & Nadeem Shaida & Ashley Shaw
  283. Hearing: Anatomy, Physiology, and Disorders of the Auditory System, 3rd Edition: Aage Moller
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  285. Pediatric Critical Care Medicine: Volume 2: Respiratory, Cardiovascular and Central Nervous Systems, 2nd Edition: Derek S. Wheeler & Hector R. Wong & Thomas P. Shanley
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  287. Computers as Components: Principles of Embedded Computing System Design, 4th Edition: Marilyn Wolf
  288. Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing: Concepts of Care in Evidence-Based Practice, 8th Edition: Mary C. Townsend
  289. Cardiac Arrhythmia Management: A Practical Guide for Nurses and Allied Professionals, 1st Edition: Angela Tsiperfal & Linda K. Ottoboni & Salwa Beheiry & Amin Al-Ahmad & Andrea Natale & Paul J. Wang
  290. Color Atlas of Dermatopathology, 1st Edition: Jane M. Grant-Kels
  291. Obstetrics and Gynecology, 7th Edition: Charles R. B. Beckmann & William Herbert & Douglas Laube & Frank Ling & Roger Smith
  292. Primary Care: A Collaborative Practice, 5th Edition: Terry Mahan Buttaro & Patricia Polgar-Bailey & Joanne Sandberg-Cook & JoAnn Trybulski
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  294. Design of Highway Bridges: An LRFD Approach, 3rd Edition: Richard M. Barker & Jay A. Puckett
  295. Atlas of Interstitial Lung Disease Pathology: Pathology with High Resolution CT Correlations, 1st Edition: Andrew Churg
  296. Atlas of Dermatopathology: Practical Differential Diagnosis by Clinicopathologic Pattern, 1st Edition: Gunter Burg & Werner Kempf & Heinz Kutzner & Josef Feit & Laszlo Karai
  297. Atlas of Dermatopathology: Tumors, Nevi, and Cysts, 1st Edition: Gunter Burg & Heinz Kutzner & Werner Kempf & Josef Feit & Bruce R. Smoller
  298. Atlas of Essential Dermatopathology, 2013th Edition: Kasia S. Masterpol & Andrea Primiani & Lyn M. Duncan
  299. Molecular Anatomic Imaging: PET-CT and SPECT-CT Integrated Modality Imaging, 2nd Edition: Gustav K. von Schulthess
  300. Gray's Anatomy for Students, 4th Edition: Richard Drake & A. Wayne Vogl & Adam W. M. Mitchell
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  309. Anderson's Business Law and the Legal Environment, Comprehensive Volume, 23rd Edition: David P. Twomey & Marianne M. Jennings & Stephanie M Greene
  310. Physician's Guide: Understanding and Working With Integrated Case Managers, 1st Edition: Roger G. Kathol & Katherine Hobbs Knutson & Peter J. Dehnel
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  318. Research Methods for Education, 1st Edition: Gregory J. Privitera & Lynn Ahlgrim-Delzell
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  321. Spencer's Pathology of the Lung: 2 Part Set, 6th Edition: Philip Hasleton & Douglas B. Flieder
  322. Project Management for Facility Constructions: A Guide for Engineers and Architects, 2011th Edition: Alberto De Marco
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  330. Empowerment Series: Generalist Practice with Organizations and Communities, 7th Edition: Karen K. Kirst-Ashman & Grafton H. Hull
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  333. Master the Boards USMLE Step 2 CK, 5th Edition: Conrad Fischer
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  345. International Business: Competing in the Global Marketplace, 12th Edition: Charles Hill & G. Tomas M. Hult
  346. International Business: Competing in the Global Marketplace, 10th Edition: Charles Hill
  347. Theories of Human Communication, 11th Edition: Stephen W. Littlejohn & Karen A. Foss & John G. Oetzel
  348. Designing the User Interface: Strategies for Effective Human-Computer Interaction, 6th Edition: Ben Shneiderman & Catherine Plaisant & Maxine Cohen
  349. Quality Management in Construction Projects, 2nd Edition: Abdul Razzak Rumane
  350. Skills Management: New Applications, New Questions, 1st Edition: Alain Roger & Didier Vinot
  351. Pig Disease Identification and Diagnosis Guide: A Farm Handbook, 1st Edition: Steven McOrist
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Which are your Top 5 favourite coins out of the Top 100? An analysis.

I am putting together my investment portfolio for 2018 and made a complete summary of the current Top 100. Interestingly, I noticed that all coins can be categorized into 12 markets. Which markets do you think will play the biggest role in the coming year?
Here is a complete overview of all coins in an excel sheet including name, market, TPS, risk profile, time since launch (negative numbers mean that they are launching that many months in the future) and market cap. You can also sort by all of these fields of course. Coins written in bold are the strongest contenders within their market either due to having the best technology or having a small market cap and still excellent technology and potential. https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1s8PHcNvvjuy848q18py_CGcu8elRGQAUIf86EYh4QZo/edit#gid=0
The 12 markets are
  1. Currency 13 coins
  2. Platform 25 coins
  3. Ecosystem 9 coins
  4. Privacy 10 coins
  5. Currency Exchange Tool 8 coins
  6. Gaming & Gambling 5 coins
  7. Misc 15 coins
  8. Social Network 4 coins
  9. Fee Token 3 coins
  10. Decentralized Data Storage 4 coins
  11. Cloud Computing 3 coins
  12. Stable Coin 2 coins
Before we look at the individual markets, we need to take a look of the overall market and its biggest issue scalability first:
Cryptocurrencies aim to be a decentralized currency that can be used worldwide. Its goal is to replace dollar, Euro, Yen, all FIAT currencies worldwide. The coin that will achieve that will be worth several trillion dollars.
Bitcoin can only process 7 transactions per second (TPS). In order to replace all FIAT, it would need to perform at at least VISA levels, which usually processes around 3,000 TPS, up to 25,000 TPS during peak times and a maximum of 64,000 TPS. That means that this cryptocurrency would need to be able to perform at least several thousand TPS. However, a ground breaking technology should not look at current technology to set a goal for its use, i.e. estimating the number of emails sent in 1990 based on the number of faxes sent wasn’t a good estimate.
For that reason, 10,000 TPS is the absolute baseline for a cryptocurrency that wants to replace FIAT. This brings me to IOTA, which wants to connect all 80 billion IoT devices that are expected to exist by 2025, which constantly communicate with each other, creating 80 billion or more transactions per second. This is the benchmark that cryptocurrencies should be aiming for. Currently, 8 billion devices are connected to the Internet.
With its Lightning network recently launched, Bitcoin is realistically looking at 50,000 possible soon. Other notable cryptocurrencies besides IOTA and Bitcoin are Nano with 7,000 TPS already tested, Dash with several billion TPS possible with Masternodes, Neo, LISK and RHOC with 100,000 TPS by 2020, Ripple with 50,000 TPS, Ethereum with 10,000 with Sharding.
However, it needs to be said that scalability usually goes at the cost of decentralization and security. So, it needs to be seen, which of these technologies can prove itself resilient and performant.
Without further ado, here are the coins of the first market

Market 1 - Currency:

  1. Bitcoin: 1st generation blockchain with currently bad scalability currently, though the implementation of the Lightning Network looks promising and could alleviate most scalability concerns, scalability and high energy use.
  2. Ripple: Centralized currency that might become very successful due to tight involvement with banks and cross-border payments for financial institutions; banks and companies like Western Union and Moneygram (who they are currently working with) as customers customers. However, it seems they are aiming for more decentralization now.https://ripple.com/dev-blog/decentralization-strategy-update/. Has high TPS due to Proof of Correctness algorithm.
  3. Bitcoin Cash: Bitcoin fork with the difference of having an 8 times bigger block size, making it 8 times more scalable than Bitcoin currently. Further block size increases are planned. Only significant difference is bigger block size while big blocks lead to further problems that don't seem to do well beyond a few thousand TPS. Opponents to a block size argue that increasing the block size limit is unimaginative, offers only temporary relief, and damages decentralization by increasing costs of participation. In order to preserve decentralization, system requirements to participate should be kept low. To understand this, consider an extreme example: very big blocks (1GB+) would require data center level resources to validate the blockchain. This would preclude all but the wealthiest individuals from participating.Community seems more open than Bitcoin's though.
  4. Litecoin : Little brother of Bitcoin. Bitcoin fork with different mining algorithm but not much else.Copies everything that Bitcoin does pretty much. Lack of real innovation.
  5. Dash: Dash (Digital Cash) is a fork of Bitcoin and focuses on user ease. It has very fast transactions within seconds, low fees and uses Proof of Service from Masternodes for consensus. They are currently building a system called Evolution which will allow users to send money using usernames and merchants will find it easy to integrate Dash using the API. You could say Dash is trying to be a PayPal of cryptocurrencies. Currently, cryptocurrencies must choose between decentralization, speed, scalability and can pick only 2. With Masternodes, Dash picked speed and scalability at some cost of decentralization, since with Masternodes the voting power is shifted towards Masternodes, which are run by Dash users who own the most Dash.
  6. IOTA: 3rd generation blockchain called Tangle, which has a high scalability, no fees and instant transactions. IOTA aims to be the connective layer between all 80 billion IOT devices that are expected to be connected to the Internet in 2025, possibly creating 80 billion transactions per second or 800 billion TPS, who knows. However, it needs to be seen if the Tangle can keep up with this scalability and iron out its security issues that have not yet been completely resolved.
  7. Nano: 3rd generation blockchain called Block Lattice with high scalability, no fees and instant transactions. Unlike IOTA, Nano only wants to be a payment processor and nothing else, for now at least. With Nano, every user has their own blockchain and has to perform a small amount of computing for each transaction, which makes Nano perform at 300 TPS with no problems and 7,000 TPS have also been tested successfully. Very promising 3rd gen technology and strong focus on only being the fastest currency without trying to be everything.
  8. Decred: As mining operations have grown, Bitcoin’s decision-making process has become more centralized, with the largest mining companies holding large amounts of power over the Bitcoin improvement process. Decred focuses heavily on decentralization with their PoW Pos hybrid governance system to become what Bitcoin was set out to be. They will soon implement the Lightning Network to scale up. While there do not seem to be more differences to Bitcoin besides the novel hybrid consensus algorithm, which Ethereum, Aeternity and Bitcoin Atom are also implementing, the welcoming and positive Decred community and professoinal team add another level of potential to the coin.
  9. Aeternity: We’ve seen recently, that it’s difficult to scale the execution of smart contracts on the blockchain. Crypto Kitties is a great example. Something as simple as creating and trading unique assets on Ethereum bogged the network down when transaction volume soared. Ethereum and Zilliqa address this problem with Sharding. Aeternity focuses on increasing the scalability of smart contracts and dapps by moving smart contracts off-chain. Instead of running on the blockchain, smart contracts on Aeternity run in private state channels between the parties involved in the contracts. State channels are lines of communication between parties in a smart contract. They don’t touch the blockchain unless they need to for adjudication or transfer of value. Because they’re off-chain, state channel contracts can operate much more efficiently. They don’t need to pay the network for every time they compute and can also operate with greater privacy. An important aspect of smart contract and dapp development is access to outside data sources. This could mean checking the weather in London, score of a football game, or price of gold. Oracles provide access to data hosted outside the blockchain. In many blockchain projects, oracles represent a security risk and potential point of failure, since they tend to be singular, centralized data streams. Aeternity proposes decentralizing oracles with their oracle machine. Doing so would make outside data immutable and unchangeable once it reaches Aeternity’s blockchain. Of course, the data source could still be hacked, so Aeternity implements a prediction market where users can bet on the accuracy and honesty of incoming data from various oracles.It also uses prediction markets for various voting and verification purposes within the platform. Aeternity’s network runs on on a hybrid of proof of work and proof of stake. Founded by a long-time crypto-enthusiast and early colleague of Vitalik Buterin, Yanislav Malahov. Promising concept though not product yet
  10. Bitcoin Atom: Atomic Swaps and hybrid consenus. This looks like the only Bitcoin clone that actually is looking to innovate next to Bitcoin Cash.
  11. Dogecoin: Litecoin fork, fantastic community, though lagging behind a bit in technology.
  12. Bitcoin Gold: A bit better security than bitcoin through ASIC resistant algorithm, but that's it. Not that interesting.
  13. Digibyte: Digibyte's PoS blockchain is spread over a 100,000+ servers, phones, computers, and nodes across the globe, aiming for the ultimate level of decentralization. DigiByte rebalances the load between the five mining algorithms by adjusting the difficulty of each so one algorithm doesn’t become dominant. The algorithm's asymmetric difficulty has gained notoriety and been deployed in many other blockchains.DigiByte’s adoption over the past four years has been slow. It’s still a relatively obscure currency compared its competitors. The DigiByte website offers a lot of great marketing copy and buzzwords. However, there’s not much technical information about what they have planned for the future. You could say Digibyte is like Bitcoin, but with shorter blocktimes and a multi-algorithm. However, that's not really a difference big enough to truly set themselves apart from Bitcoin, since these technologies could be implemented by any blockchain without much difficulty. Their decentralization is probably their strongest asset, however, this also change quickly if the currency takes off and big miners decide to go into Digibyte.
  14. Bitcoin Diamond Asic resistant Bitcoin and Copycat

Market 2 - Platform

Most of the cryptos here have smart contracts and allow dapps (Decentralized apps) to be build on their platform and to use their token as an exchange of value between dapp services.
  1. Ethereum: 2nd generation blockchain that allows the use of smart contracts. Bad scalability currently, though this concern could be alleviated by the soon to be implemented Lightning Network aka Plasma and its Sharding concept.
  2. EOS: Promising technology that wants to be able do everything, from smart contracts like Ethereum, scalability similar to Nano with 1000 tx/second + near instant transactions and zero fees, to also wanting to be a platform for dapps. However, EOS doesn't have a product yet and everything is just promises still. Highly overvalued right now. However, there are lots of red flags, have dumped $500 million Ether over the last 2 months and possibly bought back EOS to increase the size of their ICO, which has been going on for over a year and has raised several billion dollars. All in all, their market cap is way too high for that and not even having a product.
  3. Cardano: Similar to Ethereum/EOS, however, only promises made with no delivery yet, highly overrated right now. Interesting concept though. Market cap way too high for not even having a product. Somewhat promising technology.
  4. VeChain: Singapore-based project that’s building a business enterprise platform and inventory tracking system. Examples are verifying genuine luxury goods and food supply chains. Has one of the strongest communities in the crypto world. Most hyped token of all, with merit though.
  5. Neo: Neo is a platform, similar to Eth, but more extensive, allowing dapps and smart contracts, but with a different smart contract gas system, consensus mechanism (PoS vs. dBfT), governance model, fixed vs unfixed supply, expensive contracts vs nearly free contracts, different ideologies for real world adoption. There are currently only 9 nodes, each of which are being run by a company/entity hand selected by the NEO council (most of which are located in china) and are under contract. This means that although the locations of the nodes may differ, ultimately the neo council can bring them down due to their legal contracts. In fact this has been done in the past when the neo council was moving 50 million neo that had been locked up. Also dbft (or neo's implmentation of it) has failed underload causing network outages during major icos. The first step in decentralization is that the NEO Counsel will select trusted nodes (Universities, business partners, etc.) and slowly become less centralized that way. The final step in decentralization will be allowing NEO holders to vote for new nodes, similar to a DPoS system (ARK/EOS/LISK). NEO has a regulation/government friendly ideology. Finally they are trying to work undewith the Chinese government in regards to regulations. If for some reason they wanted it shut down, they could just shut it down.
  6. Stellar: PoS system, similar goals as Ripple, but more of a platform than only a currency. 80% of Stellar are owned by Stellar.org still, making the currency centralized.
  7. Ethereum classic: Original Ethereum that decided not to fork after a hack. The Ethereum that we know is its fork. Uninteresing, because it has a lot of less resources than Ethereum now and a lot less community support.
  8. Ziliqa: Zilliqa is building a new way of sharding. 2400 tpx already tested, 10,000 tps soon possible by being linearly scalable with the number of nodes. That means, the more nodes, the faster the network gets. They are looking at implementing privacy as well.
  9. QTUM: Enables Smart contracts on the Bitcoin blockchain. Useful.
  10. Icon: Korean ethereum. Decentralized application platform that's building communities in partnership with banks, insurance providers, hospitals, and universities. Focused on ID verification and payments. No big differentiators to the other 20 Ethereums, except that is has a product. That is a plus. Maybe cheap alternative to Ethereum.
  11. LISK: Lisk's difference to other BaaS is that side chains are independent to the main chain and have to have their own nodes. Similar to neo whole allows dapps to deploy their blockchain to. However, Lisk is currently somewhat centralized with a small group of members owning more than 50% of the delegated positions. Lisk plans to change the consensus algorithm for that reason in the near future.
  12. Rchain: Similar to Ethereum with smart contract, though much more scalable at an expected 40,000 TPS and possible 100,000 TPS. Not launched yet. No product launched yet, though promising technology. Not overvalued, probably at the right price right now.
  13. ARDR: Similar to Lisk. Ardor is a public blockchain platform that will allow people to utilize the blockchain technology of Nxt through the use of child chains. A child chain, which is a ‘light’ blockchain that can be customized to a certain extent, is designed to allow easy self-deploy for your own blockchain. Nxt claims that users will "not need to worry" about security, as that part is now handled by the main chain (Ardor). This is the chief innovation of Ardor. Ardor was evolved from NXT by the same company. NEM started as a NXT clone.
  14. Ontology: Similar to Neo. Interesting coin
  15. Bytom: Bytom is an interactive protocol of multiple byte assets. Heterogeneous byte-assets (indigenous digital currency, digital assets) that operate in different forms on the Bytom Blockchain and atomic assets (warrants, securities, dividends, bonds, intelligence information, forecasting information and other information that exist in the physical world) can be registered, exchanged, gambled and engaged in other more complicated and contract-based interoperations via Bytom.
  16. Nxt: Similar to Lisk
  17. Stratis: Different to LISK, Stratis will allow businesses and organizations to create their own blockchain according to their own needs, but secured on the parent Stratis chain. Stratis’s simple interface will allow organizations to quickly and easily deploy and/or test blockchain functionality of the Ethereum, BitShares, BitCoin, Lisk and Stratis environements.
  18. Status: Status provides access to all of Ethereum’s decentralized applications (dapps) through an app on your smartphone. It opens the door to mass adoption of Ethereum dapps by targeting the fastest growing computer segment in the world – smartphone users.16. Ark: Fork of Lisk that focuses on a smaller feature set. Ark wallets can only vote for one delegate at a time which forces delegates to compete against each other and makes cartel formations incredibly hard, if not impossible.
  19. Neblio: Similar to Neo, but 30x smaller market cap.
  20. NEM: Is similar to Neo No marketing team, very high market cap for little clarilty what they do.
  21. Bancor: Bancor is a Decentralized Liquidity Network that allows you to hold any Ethereum token and convert it to any other token in the network, with no counter party, at an automatically calculated price, using a simple web wallet.
  22. Dragonchain: The Purpose of DragonChain is to help companies quickly and easily incorporate blockchain into their business applications. Many companies might be interested in making this transition because of the benefits associated with serving clients over a blockchain – increased efficiency and security for transactions, a reduction of costs from eliminating potential fraud and scams, etc.
  23. Skycoin: Transactions with zero fees that take apparently two seconds, unlimited transaction rate, no need for miners and block rewards, low power usage, all of the usual cryptocurrency technical vulnerabilities fixed, a consensus mechanism superior to anything that exists, resistant to all conceivable threats (government censorship, community infighting, cybenucleaconventional warfare, etc). Skycoin has their own consensus algorithm known as Obelisk written and published academically by an early developer of Ethereum. Obelisk is a non-energy intensive consensus algorithm based on a concept called ‘web of trust dynamics’ which is completely different to PoW, PoS, and their derivatives. Skywire, the flagship application of Skycoin, has the ambitious goal of decentralizing the internet at the hardware level and is about to begin the testnet in April. However, this is just one of the many facets of the Skycoin ecosystem. Skywire will not only provide decentralized bandwidth but also storage and computation, completing the holy trinity of commodities essential for the new internet. Skycion a smear campaign launched against it, though they seem legit and reliable. Thus, they are probably undervalued.

Market 3 - Ecosystem

The 3rd market with 11 coins is comprised of ecosystem coins, which aim to strengthen the ease of use within the crypto space through decentralized exchanges, open standards for apps and more
  1. Nebulas: Similar to how Google indexes webpages Nebulas will index blockchain projects, smart contracts & data using the Nebulas rank algorithm that sifts & sorts the data. Developers rewarded NAS to develop & deploy on NAS chain. Nebulas calls this developer incentive protocol – basically rewards are issued based on how often dapp/contract etc. is used, the more the better the rewards and Proof of devotion. Works like DPoS except the best, most economically incentivised developers (Bookkeeppers) get the forging spots. Ensuring brains stay with the project (Cross between PoI & PoS). 2,400 TPS+, DAG used to solve the inter-transaction dependencies in the PEE (Parallel Execution Environment) feature, first crypto Wallet that supports the Lightening Network.
  2. Waves: Decentralized exchange and crowdfunding platform. Let’s companies and projects to issue and manage their own digital coin tokens to raise money.
  3. Salt: Leveraging blockchain assets to secure cash loands. Plans to offer cash loans in traditional currencies, backed by your cryptocurrency assets. Allows lenders worldwide to skip credit checks for easier access to affordable loans.
  4. CHAINLINK: ChainLink is a decentralized oracle service, the first of its kind. Oracles are defined as an ‘agent’ that finds and verifies real-world occurrences and submits this information to a blockchain to be used in smart contracts.With ChainLink, smart contract users can use the network’s oracles to retrieve data from off-chain application program interfaces (APIs), data pools, and other resources and integrate them into the blockchain and smart contracts. Basically, ChainLink takes information that is external to blockchain applications and puts it on-chain. The difference to Aeternity is that Chainlink deploys the smart contracts on the Ethereum blockchain while Aeternity has its own chain.
  5. WTC: Combines blockchain with IoT to create a management system for supply chains Interesting
  6. Ethos unifyies all cryptos. Ethos is building a multi-cryptocurrency phone wallet. The team is also building an investment diversification tool and a social network
  7. Aion: Aion is the token that pays for services on the Aeternity platform.
  8. USDT: is no cryptocurrency really, but a replacement for dollar for trading After months of asking for proof of dollar backing, still no response from Tether.

Market 4 - Privacy

The 4th market are privacy coins. As you might know, Bitcoin is not anonymous. If the IRS or any other party asks an exchange who is the identity behind a specific Bitcoin address, they know who you are and can track back almost all of the Bitcoin transactions you have ever made and all your account balances. Privacy coins aim to prevent exactly that through address fungability, which changes addresses constantly, IP obfuscation and more. There are 2 types of privacy coins, one with completely privacy and one with optional privacy. Optional Privacy coins like Dash and Nav have the advantage of more user friendliness over completely privacy coins such as Monero and Enigma.
  1. Monero: Currently most popular privacy coin, though with a very high market cap. Since their privacy is all on chain, all prior transactions would be deanonymized if their protocol is ever cracked. This requires a quantum computing attack though. PIVX is better in that regard.
  2. Zcash: A decentralized and open-source cryptocurrency that hide the sender, recipient, and value of transactions. Offers users the option to make transactions public later for auditing. Decent privacy coin, though no default privacy
  3. Verge: Calls itself privacy coin without providing private transactions, multiple problems over the last weeks has a toxic community, and way too much hype for what they have.
  4. Bytecoin: First privacy-focused cryptocurrency with anonymous transactions. Bytecoin’s code was later adapted to create Monero, the more well-known anonymous cryptocurrency. Has several scam accusations, 80% pre-mine, bad devs, bad tech
  5. Bitcoin Private: A merge fork of Bitcoin and Zclassic with Zclassic being a fork of Zcash with the difference of a lack of a founders fee required to mine a valid block. This promotes a fair distribution, preventing centralized coin ownership and control. Bitcoin private offers the optional ability to keep the sender, receiver, and amount private in a given transaction. However, this is already offered by several good privacy coins (Monero, PIVX) and Bitcoin private doesn't offer much more beyond this.
  6. Komodo: The Komodo blockchain platform uses Komodo’s open-source cryptocurrency for doing transparent, anonymous, private, and fungible transactions. They are then made ultra-secure using Bitcoin’s blockchain via a Delayed Proof of Work (dPoW) protocol and decentralized crowdfunding (ICO) platform to remove middlemen from project funding. Offers services for startups to create and manage their own Blockchains.
  7. PIVX: As a fork of Dash, PIVX uses an advanced implementation of the Zerocoin protocol to provide it’s privacy. This is a form of zeroknowledge proofs, which allow users to spend ‘Zerocoins’ that have no link back to them. Unlike Zcash u have denominations in PIVX, so they can’t track users by their payment amount being equal to the amount of ‘minted’ coins, because everyone uses the same denominations. PIVX is also implementing Bulletproofs, just like Monero, and this will take care of arguably the biggest weakness of zeroknowledge protocols: the trusted setup.
  8. Zcoin: PoW cryptocurrency. Private financial transactions, enabled by the Zerocoin Protocol. Zcoin is the first full implementation of the Zerocoin Protocol, which allows users to have complete privacy via Zero-Knowledge cryptographic proofs.
  9. Enigma: Monero is to Bitcoin what enigma is to Ethereum. Enigma is for making the data used in smart contracts private. More of a platform for dapps than a currency like Monero. Very promising.
  10. Navcoin: Like bitcoin but with added privacy and pos and 1,170 tps, but only because of very short 30 second block times. Though, privacy is optional, but aims to be more user friendly than Monero. However, doesn't really decide if it wants to be a privacy coin or not. Same as Zcash.Strong technology, non-shady team.
  11. Tenx: Raised 80 million, offers cryptocurrency-linked credit cards that let you spend virtual money in real life. Developing a series of payment platforms to make spending cryptocurrency easier. However, the question is if full privacy coins will be hindered in growth through government regulations and optional privacy coins will become more successful through ease of use and no regulatory hindrance.

Market 5 - Currency Exchange Tool

Due to the sheer number of different cryptocurrencies, exchanging one currency for the other it still cumbersome. Further, merchants don’t want to deal with overcluttered options of accepting cryptocurrencies. This is where exchange tool like Req come in, which allow easy and simple exchange of currencies.
  1. Cryptonex: Fiat and currency exchange between various blockchain services, similar to REQ.
  2. QASH: Qash is used to fuel its liquid platform which will be an exchange that will distribute their liquidity pool. Its product, the Worldbook is a multi-exchange order book that matches crypto to crypto, and crypto to fiat and the reverse across all currencies. E.g., someone is selling Bitcoin is USD on exchange1 not owned by Quoine and someone is buying Bitcoin in EURO on exchange 2 not owned by Quoine. If the forex conversions and crypto conversions match then the trade will go through and the Worldbook will match it, it'll make the sale and the purchase on either exchange and each user will get what they wanted, which means exchanges with lower liquidity if they join the Worldbook will be able to fill orders and take trade fees they otherwise would miss out on.They turned it on to test it a few months ago for an hour or so and their exchange was the top exchange in the world by 4x volume for the day because all Worldbook trades ran through it. Binance wants BNB to be used on their one exchange. Qash wants their QASH token embedded in all of their partners. More info here https://www.reddit.com/CryptoCurrency/comments/8a8lnwhich_are_your_top_5_favourite_coins_out_of_the/dwyjcbb/?context=3
  3. Kyber: network Exchange between cryptocurrencies, similar to REQ. Features automatic coin conversions for payments. Also offers payment tools for developers and a cryptocurrency wallet.
  4. Achain: Building a boundless blockchain world like Req .
  5. Req: Exchange between cryptocurrencies.
  6. Bitshares: Exchange between cryptocurrencies. Noteworthy are the 1.5 second average block times and throughput potential of 100,000 transactions per second with currently 2,400 TPS having been proven. However, bitshares had several Scam accusations in the past.
  7. Loopring: A protocol that will enable higher liquidity between exchanges and personal wallets.
  8. ZRX: Open standard for dapps. Open, permissionless protocol allowing for ERC20 tokens to be traded on the Ethereum blockchain. In 0x protocol, orders are transported off-chain, massively reducing gas costs and eliminating blockchain bloat. Relayers help broadcast orders and collect a fee each time they facilitate a trade. Anyone can build a relayer.

Market 6 - Gaming

With an industry size of $108B worldwide, Gaming is one of the largest markets in the world. For sure, cryptocurrencies will want to have a share of that pie.
  1. Storm: Mobile game currency on a platform with 9 million players.
  2. Fun: A platform for casino operators to host trustless, provably-fair gambling through the use of smart contracts, as well as creating their own implementation of state channels for scalability.
  3. Electroneum: Mobile game currency They have lots of technical problems, such as several 51% attacks
  4. Wax: Marketplace to trade in-game items

Market 7 - Misc

There are various markets being tapped right now. They are all summed up under misc.
  1. OMG: Omise is designed to enable financial services for people without bank accounts. It works worldwide and with both traditional money and cryptocurrencies.
  2. Power ledger: Australian blockchain-based cryptocurrency and energy trading platform that allows for decentralized selling and buying of renewable energy. Unique market and rather untapped market in the crypto space.
  3. Populous: A platform that connects business owners and invoice buyers without middlemen. Invoice sellers get cash flow to fund their business and invoice buyers earn interest. Similar to OMG, small market.
  4. Monacoin: The first Japanese cryptocurrency. Focused on micro-transactions and based on a popular internet meme of a type-written cat. This makes it similar to Dogecoin. Very niche, tiny market.
  5. Revain: Legitimizing reviews via the blockchain. Interesting concept, though market not as big.
  6. Augur: Platform to forecast and make wagers on the outcome of real-world events (AKA decentralized predictions). Uses predictions for a “wisdom of the crowd” search engine. Not launched yet.
  7. Substratum: Revolutionzing hosting industry via per request billing as a decentralized internet hosting system. Uses a global network of private computers to create the free and open internet of the future. Participants earn cryptocurrency. Interesting concept.
  8. Veritaseum: Is supposed to be a peer to peer gateway, though it looks like very much like a scam.
  9. TRON: Tronix is looking to capitalize on ownership of internet data to content creators. However, they plagiarized their white paper, which is a no go. They apologized, so it needs to be seen how they will conduct themselves in the future. Extremely high market cap for not having a product, nor proof of concept.
  10. Syscoin: A cryptocurrency with a decentralized marketplace that lets people buy and sell products directly without third parties. Trying to remove middlemen like eBay and Amazon.
  11. Hshare: Most likely scam because of no code changes, most likely pump and dump scheme, dead community.
  12. BAT: An Ethereum-based token that can be exchanged between content creators, users, and advertisers. Decentralized ad-network that pays based on engagement and attention.
  13. Dent: Decentralizeed exchange of mobile data, enabling mobile data to be marketed, purchased or distributed, so that users can quickly buy or sell data from any user to another one.
  14. Ncash: End to end encrypted Identification system for retailers to better serve their customers .
  15. Factom Secure record-keeping system that allows companies to store their data directly on the Blockchain. The goal is to make records more transparent and trustworthy .

Market 8 - Social network

Web 2.0 is still going strong and Web 3.0 is not going to ignore it. There are several gaming tokens already out there and a few with decent traction already, such as Steem, which is Reddit with voting through money is a very interesting one.
  1. Mithril: As users create content via social media, they will be rewarded for their contribution, the better the contribution, the more they will earn
  2. Steem: Like Reddit, but voting with money. Already launched product and Alexa rank 1,000 Thumbs up.
  3. Rdd: Reddcoin makes the process of sending and receiving money fun and rewarding for everyone. Reddcoin is dedicated to one thing – tipping on social networks as a way to bring cryptocurrency awareness and experience to the general public.
  4. Kin: Token for the platform Kik. Kik has a massive user base of 400 million people. Replacing paying with FIAT with paying with KIN might get this token to mass adoption very quickly.

Market 9 - Fee token

Popular exchanges realized that they can make a few billion dollars more by launching their own token. Owning these tokens gives you a reduction of trading fees. Very handy and BNB (Binance Coin) has been one of the most resilient tokens, which have withstood most market drops over the last weeks and was among the very few coins that could show growth.
  1. BNB: Fee token for Binance
  2. Gas: Not a Fee token for an exchange, but it is a dividend paid out on Neo and a currency that can be used to purchase services for dapps.
  3. Kucoin: Fee token for Kucoin

Market 10 - Decentralized Data Storage

Currently, data storage happens with large companies or data centers that are prone to failure or losing data. Decentralized data storage makes loss of data almost impossible by distributing your files to numerous clients that hold tiny pieces of your data. Remember Torrents? Torrents use a peer-to-peer network. It is similar to that. Many users maintain copies of the same file, when someone wants a copy of that file, they send a request to the peer-to-peer network., users who have the file, known as seeds, send fragments of the file to the requester., he requester receives many fragments from many different seeds, and the torrent software recompiles these fragments to form the original file.
  1. Gbyte: Byteball data is stored and ordered using directed acyclic graph (DAG) rather than blockchain. This allows all users to secure each other's data by referencing earlier data units created by other users, and also removes scalability limits common for blockchains, such as blocksize issue.
  2. Siacoin: Siacoin is decentralized storage platform. Distributes encrypted files to thousands of private users who get paid for renting out their disk space. Anybody with siacoins can rent storage from hosts on Sia. This is accomplish via "smart" storage contracts stored on the Sia blockchain. The smart contract provides a payment to the host only after the host has kept the file for a given amount of time. If the host loses the file, the host does not get paid.
  3. Maidsafecoin: MaidSafe stands for Massive Array of Internet Disks, Secure Access for Everyone.Instead of working with data centers and servers that are common today and are vulnerable to data theft and monitoring, SAFE’s network uses advanced P2P technology to bring together the spare computing capacity of all SAFE users and create a global network. You can think of SAFE as a crowd-sourced internet. All data and applications reside in this network. It’s an autonomous network that automatically sets prices and distributes data and rents out hard drive disk space with a Blockchain-based storage solutions.When you upload a file to the network, such as a photo, it will be broken into pieces, hashed, and encrypted. The data is then randomly distributed across the network. Redundant copies of the data are created as well so that if someone storing your file turns off their computer, you will still have access to your data. And don’t worry, even with pieces of your data on other people’s computers, they won’t be able to read them. You can earn MadeSafeCoins by participating in storing data pieces from the network on your computer and thus earning a Proof of Resource.
  4. Storj: Storj aims to become a cloud storage platform that can’t be censored or monitored, or have downtime. Your files are encrypted, shredded into little pieces called 'shards', and stored in a decentralized network of computers around the globe. No one but you has a complete copy of your file, not even in an encrypted form.

Market 11 - Cloud computing

Obviously, renting computing power, one of the biggest emerging markets as of recent years, e.g. AWS and Digital Ocean, is also a service, which can be bought and managed via the blockchain.
  1. Golem: Allows easy use of Supercomputer in exchange for tokens. People worldwide can rent out their computers to the network and get paid for that service with Golem tokens.
  2. Elf: Allows easy use of Cloud computing in exchange for tokens.

Market 12 - Stablecoin

Last but not least, there are 2 stablecoins that have established themselves within the market. A stable coin is a coin that wants to be independent of the volatility of the crypto markets. This has worked out pretty well for Maker and DGD, accomplished through a carefully diversified currency fund and backing each token by 1g or real gold respectively. DO NOT CONFUSE DGD AND MAKER with their STABLE COINS DGX and DAI. DGD and MAKER are volatile, because they are the companies of DGX and DAI. DGX and DAI are the stable coins.
  1. DGD: Platform of the Stablecoin DGX. Every DGX coin is backed by 1g of gold and make use proof of asset consensus.
  2. Maker: Platform of the Stablecoin DAI that doesn't vary much in price through widespread and smart diversification of assets.
EDIT: Added a risk factor from 0 to 10. The baseline is 2 for any crypto. Significant scandals, mishaps, shady practices, questionable technology, increase the risk factor. Not having a product yet automatically means a risk factor of 6. Strong adoption and thus strong scrutiny or positive community lower the risk factor.
EDIT2: Added a subjective potential factor from 0 to 10, where its overall potential and a small or big market cap is factored in. Bitcoin with lots of potential only gets a 9, because of its massive market cap, because if Bitcoin goes 10x, smaller coins go 100x, PIVX gets a 10 for being as good as Monero while carrying a 10x smaller market cap, which would make PIVX go 100x if Monero goes 10x.
submitted by galan77 to CryptoCurrency [link] [comments]

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