For the last couple of decades, David DiSalvo has been a writer, editor and public communicator in a variety of venues, including public health and awareness campaigns about the dangers of lead exposure to children, the need for better energy efficiency technologies from Boston to Beijing, and the scourge of poor air quality in cities around the U.S.
He’s also worked for the civil engineering industry musing about the nation’s crumbling infrastructure, technologies that reduce solid waste, and the wonders of modern sewage systems. And way back he was the managing editor of a peer-reviewed healthcare journal. These days he writes about cognitive neuroscience and related ‘ologies’, new media technology and philosophy of mind. In addition to writing at Neuronarrative, he has been a contributor to Scientific American Mind Matters.
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Monkey See, Monkey Persuaded
One of the "greatest commercials ever made" isn't exactly what it seems, and you may be surprised to find out why.
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