IJCSI International Journal of Computer Science Issues‚ Vol. 8‚ Issue 6‚ No 2‚ November 2011 ISSN (Online): 1694‐0814 www.IJCSI.org 192 Virtual Shopping and Impulse Purchasing Strengths and Weaknesses in Pakistan Muhammad Ali Hussain 1‚ Muhammad Zeeshan Anwar 2‚ Humna Mehboob 3‚ Ayesha Majeed 4‚ Tanzila Samin 5 1 School of Business Management‚ NFC Institute of Engineering & Fertilizer Research‚ Faisalabad Pakistan. Faisalabad‚ 38000‚ Pakistan 2 School of Business Management
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A structural model of fashion-oriented impulse buying behavior Eun Joo Park Dong-A University‚ Busan‚ Korea‚ and Eun Young Kim and Judith Cardona Forney School of Merchandising and Hospitality Management‚ University of North Texas‚ Denton‚ Texas‚ USA Abstract Purpose This study aims to examine the causal relationships among fashion involvement‚ positive emotion‚ hedonic consumption tendency‚ and fashion-oriented impulse buying in the context of shopping. Design/methodology/approach
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The Great Answer Author Details Charles Fulton Ouster was born on Jan. 22‚ 1893‚ in Baltimore‚ Md. He studied law but turned to journalism‚ working as a reporter and then as an arts critic for the Baltimore American while also contributing to magazines. In 1923 he became editor of Metropolitan magazine‚ and from 1931 to 1942 he edited Liberty magazine. He accepted the position of senior editor at Reader’s Digest in 1944. While working as an editor‚ Ouster also pursued a parallel career in writing
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Lab Manual Anatomy and Physiology LabPaq: AP-1 14 Small-Scale Experiments for Independent Study Published by Hands-On Labs‚ Inc. Anatomy and Physiology: Independent Laboratory Exercises for the First Semester Designed to accompany Anatomy & Physiology LabPaq AP-1 062211 LabPaq® is a registered trademark of Hands-On Labs‚ Inc. (HOL). The LabPaq referenced in this manual is produced by Hands-On Labs‚ Inc. which holds and reserves all copyrights on the intellectual properties associated
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taken from Dante’s Divine Comedy. It reads: “If I thought my answer were to one who could ever return to the world‚ this flame would move no more; but since no one has ever returned alive from this depth‚ if what I hear be true‚ without fear of infamy I answer you.” The words are spoken by a lost soul‚ damned to Hell for the attempt to buy absolution in advance of committing a crime. This correlates with Prufrock’s need to know the answer to the question he wants to ask as a condition of asking it
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1Chapter 26 Internal and Governmental Financial Auditing and Operational Auditing Review Questions 26-1 Internal auditors who perform financial auditing are responsible for evaluating whether their company’s internal controls are designed and operating effectively and whether the financial statements are fairly presented. This responsibility is essentially the same as the responsibility of external auditors who perform financial audits. The two types of auditors are also similar in that
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Speed of the Human Neural Impulse Helmholtz (1821-1894) was a German scientist. In 1850‚ he measured the neural impulse in frogs. By strapping down the frogs and putting electrical voltage into their legs‚ Helmholtz measured the time it took for the frogs’ leg to twitch. Helmholtz used a galvanometer to measure the neural impulse. He found that the neural impulse in frogs was 83-90 ft/s. Afterwards‚ Helmholtz went on to test the neural impulse in humans. He put a low grade electrical voltage to humans’
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CHAPTER 3 RISK ASSESSMENT AND MATERIALITY Answers to Review Questions 3-1 Audit risk is the risk that the auditor may unknowingly fail to appropriately modify the opinion on a set of financial statements that are materially misstated. Engagement risk is the exposure to loss or injury to professional practice from litigation‚ adverse publicity‚ or other events arising in connection with financial statements audited and reported on. In simple terms‚ audit risk is the risk that an auditor will
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organization d. all of the above e. none of the above (Answer: d; p. 5; Moderate) 2. _____ are key building blocks for developing and managing customer relationships. f. Consumer expectations and customer satisfaction g. Customer choices and product offers h. Product performance and customer value i. Customer value and customer satisfaction j. Strategic plans (Answer: d; p. 8; Challenging) 3. The _____ starts with the factory‚ focusing
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technology course per training session. (a) Identify the main entity types for the company. (b) Identify the main relationship types and specify the multiplicity for each relationship. State any assumptions you make about the data. (c) Using your answers for (a) and (b)‚ draw a single ER diagram to represent the data requirements for the company. Chapter 13 Extended Entity-Relationship Modelling 13.7- Describe the two main constraints that apply to a specialization/generalization
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