著者
渡辺智美 中村亮太 上林憲行
雑誌
第75回全国大会講演論文集
巻号頁・発行日
vol.2013, no.1, pp.695-696, 2013-03-06

面接対策のための書籍はあるが, 面接者に良印象を与える話速の具体的数値や, 悪印象を与えてしまう音声フィラーの頻出等, 言語情報以外のコミュニケーション法に関する記載は少ない. 本研究では面接者が重視する受験者の話し方を構成する要素を明らかにするために, 本学で開講された模擬面接官養成講座の受講生を面接者とした模擬面接を実施した. その中で面接者による声の大きさ・話速・音声フィラー・繰り返し・沈黙の項目に対する4段階主観評価, 音声フィラー・繰り返し・沈黙の頻出数, 内容も含む面接印象評価の取得と, 逐語記録実施による話速分析を行った. その結果, 話速と声の大きさが面接者の印象評価に影響を与えていることが示唆された.
出版者
日経BP社
雑誌
日経ビジネスassocie (ISSN:13472844)
巻号頁・発行日
vol.11, no.6, pp.136-139, 2012-07

アナウンサーの仕事は瞬時の対応力と表現力がなければ務まらない。採用試験の難関を突破するには、面接官のむちゃぶりに応える必要がある。アナウンサー養成学校で行っている特訓を参考にすれば、ビジネスシーンでの即興力も鍛えられる。 アナウンサーの仕事は即興力が必須だ。
著者
森田 桂
出版者
The Society of Synthetic Organic Chemistry, Japan
雑誌
有機合成化学協会誌 (ISSN:00379980)
巻号頁・発行日
vol.35, no.5, pp.375-381, 1977-05-01 (Released:2009-11-13)
参考文献数
67
被引用文献数
3 3

The unpleasant odor of sulfur-containing organic substances has long been an annoyance to human beings as exemplified by the fact that the stench issued by the skunk is represented by 1-butanethiol and that many other mercaptans and hydrogen sulfide are currently under severe environmental regulations.By the advent of recent chromatographic separation techniques together with micro-analytical tools, a variety of pleasant and unpleasant odorous substances have been isolated and characterized as being the aroma-bearing substances of many kinds of foods.The present paper reviews these sulfur-containing substances in relation with their characteristic aroma of beef, “shiitake” an edible mushroom (Lentinus edodes Sing.), “sho-yu” a Japanese Soy-Sauce, tomato, potato and potato chips, coffee, cocoa, roasted nuts, bell peppers, and others.
著者
島津 毅
出版者
史学会 ; 1889-
雑誌
史学雑誌 (ISSN:00182478)
巻号頁・発行日
vol.125, no.8, pp.1359-1394, 2016-08

1 0 0 0 OA 触留

出版者
巻号頁・発行日
vol.第60冊, 1000
著者
高垣 亜矢
出版者
公益財団法人 史学会
雑誌
史学雑誌 (ISSN:00182478)
巻号頁・発行日
vol.121, no.10, pp.1743-1765, 2012

The aim of this article is to reexamine the characteristic features of the distribution structure of the cow and horse leather industry in western Japan focusing on the activities of deputy managers (tedai 手代) in charge of wholesale warehouses and their temporarily employed eta (穢多) subordinates (tesaki 手先). During the region's late premodern period, the leather that was produced by the inferior caste of eta from the hides of dead animals was sent to the village of Watanabe in Osaka, where the leather wholesaling industry was concentrated. The most influential research done to date on the people who directed the distribution of leather from these warehouses is the work done by Tsukada Takashi, who has argued that within the intermediary role played by the wholesalers in both buying and selling, leather merchants gained control of distribution. That being said, based on the results from research concentrating on the history of distribution during the period, which has shown definite differences between wholesalers and middlemen, the author assumes that it was tedai who functioned as middlemen, and concludes that it is necessary to reconsider tedai activities. To begin with, the author explicitly shows that the role of wholesale middlemen was represented by the activities of warehouse deputy managers and that the buying and selling of leather was directly transacted by them on the basis of personal relations established between deputy managers and local eta. Secondly, tesaki were also involved in leather commerce, their role was temporary in merely helping to collect freight for the wholesalers. Since tesaki were temporary employees, they could be employed by other wholesalers. In such cases, tesaki posed a disturbance the leather collection of their former employers. Although the activities of tesaki were similar to those of tedai, there was a difference in that the former traded on the basis of transient relationships for profit, while the latter worked for the profit of warehouse which they served. The author concludes that the activities of tedai and the eta caste tesaki brought about significant changes in both the structure of leather distribution throughout western Japan, in general, and in the internal village structure of Watanabe, in particular. In so doing, this type of leather merchant as the dominant actor in the leather trade. Thus, leather merchants such as tedai and tesaki who actively engaged in transactions had a large impact on the traditional order of the leather wholesale distribution system.