Academic literature on the topic 'Love-hate relationships'

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Journal articles on the topic "Love-hate relationships"

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Lehmann-Willenbrock, Nale, Joseph A. Allen, and Dain Belyeu. "Our love/hate relationship with meetings." Management Research Review 39, no. 10 (October 17, 2016): 1293–312. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/mrr-08-2015-0195.

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Purpose Employees at all organizational levels spend large portions of their work lives in meetings, many of which are not effective. Previous process-analytical research has identified counterproductive communication patterns to help explain why many meetings go wrong. This study aims to illustrate the ways in which counterproductive – and productive – meeting behaviors are related to individual work engagement and emotional exhaustion. Design/methodology/approach The authors built a new research-based survey tool for measuring counterproductive meeting behaviors. An online sample of working adults (N = 440) was recruited to test the factor structure of this new survey and to examine the relationships between both good and bad meeting behaviors and employee attitudes beyond the meeting context. Findings Using structural equation modeling, this study found that counterproductive meeting behaviors were linked to decreased employee engagement and increased emotional exhaustion, whereas good meeting behaviors were linked to increased engagement and decreased emotional exhaustion. These relationships were mediated via individual meeting satisfaction and perceived meeting effectiveness. Research limitations/implications The study findings provide a nuanced view of meeting outcomes by showing that the behaviors that people observe in their meetings connect not only to meeting satisfaction and effectiveness but also to important workplace attitudes (i.e. employee engagement and emotional exhaustion). In other words, managers and meeting leaders need to be mindful of behavior in meetings, seek ways to mitigate poor behavior and seek opportunities to reward and encourage citizenship behavior. Originality/value This study shows how good and bad meeting behaviors relate to employee perceptions of meeting effectiveness and individual job attitudes. The authors develop a science-based, practitioner-friendly new survey tool for observing counterproductive meeting behavior and offer a juxtaposition of good and bad meeting behaviors in a single model.
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Pastoors, Katja. "Consultants: love‐hate relationships with communities of practice." Learning Organization 14, no. 1 (January 16, 2007): 21–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/09696470710718320.

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Ma, Liang. "When love becomes hate: how different consumer-brand relationships interact with crises to influence consumers' reactions." Corporate Communications: An International Journal 25, no. 3 (April 9, 2020): 357–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/ccij-08-2019-0103.

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PurposeA well-accepted proposition in the literature of corporate strategic communication and public relations is that consumer-brand relationships (CBRs) affect corporate crisis communication. However, it is inconclusive whether CBRs protect or work against brands, because both buffering effects and love-becomes-hate effects have been found. This study attempts to explain and bridge the seemingly inconsistent findings by clarifying the effects of different types of CBRs in different brand transgressions.Design/methodology/approachRe-conceptualizing CBRs into non-identifying relationships and identifying relationships, this study examined the possible interaction effects of CBRs and crises on consumers' attitudes and emotions, which then influence their behavioral intentions. A three-step multi-group structural equation modeling (SEM) was used to analyze the data collected from an online experiment with nearly 900 consumers of two brands.FindingsAlthough non-identifying relationships offer buffering effects, identifying relationships primarily offer love-becomes-hate effects by intensifying negative emotions such as anger and disappointment, which in turn affect consumers' behavioral intentions. Such patterns hold regardless of whether a crisis directly threatens the core meaning of the brand.Originality/valueThis study clarifies the effects of different types of CBRs in crises and shows that deep psychological connections (i.e. identifying relationships) offer love-becomes-hate effects. It suggests that one promising future research direction for crisis communication and public relations scholars is to examine how to mitigate such love-becomes-hate effects so that brands can keep their loyal consumers.
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Ryland, Helen. "Could you hate a robot? And does it matter if you could?" AI & SOCIETY 36, no. 2 (March 15, 2021): 637–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00146-021-01173-5.

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AbstractThis article defends two claims. First, humans could be in relationships characterised by hate with some robots. Second, it matters that humans could hate robots, as this hate could wrong the robots (by leaving them at risk of mistreatment, exploitation, etc.). In defending this second claim, I will thus be accepting that morally considerable robots either currently exist, or will exist in the near future, and so it can matter (morally speaking) how we treat these robots. The arguments presented in this article make an important original contribution to the robo-philosophy literature, and particularly the literature on human–robot relationships (which typically only consider positive relationship types, e.g., love, friendship, etc.). Additionally, as explained at the end of the article, my discussions of robot hate could also have notable consequences for the emerging robot rights movement. Specifically, I argue that understanding human–robot relationships characterised by hate could actually help theorists argue for the rights of robots.
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Aizer, Anna, and Pedro Dal Bó. "Love, hate and murder: Commitment devices in violent relationships." Journal of Public Economics 93, no. 3-4 (April 2009): 412–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jpubeco.2008.09.011.

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Hutton, Cheryl, Joanne Robinson, and Robert Holliday. "Relationships with research post qualification: Love/hate or just neglect?" Clinical Psychology Forum 1, no. 241 (January 2013): 20–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.53841/bpscpf.2013.1.241.20.

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Research is a core component of clinical psychology training and part of our professional identity, yet few clinical psychologists remain involved with research post qualification. This article reports feedback from informal training sessions exploring clinical psychologists’ relationships with research.
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Koc, Mustafa Can, Laurentiu-Gabriel Talaghir, Aydin Pekel, Arif Cetin, and Leonard Stoica. "My sweetheart has a basketball match: The relationship between love-hate and identification of individuals attending a euroleague match for recreational purposes." PLOS ONE 19, no. 7 (July 26, 2024): e0307892. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0307892.

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The objective of this research was to examine the Love-Hate and Identification Relationship of Individuals Participating in Euroleague Match for Recreational Purposes. The study was conducted using a relational survey methodology. The study’s population comprises persons who watching recreational purpose part in the Euroleague match held in Istanbul in 2023–2024 season, while the sample consists of 178 voluntary participants selected through convenience sampling. The participants completed the Fan Love-Hate Scale and Fan Identification Scale, in addition to being asked about their gender, marital status, age, educational status, and frequency of attending football matches per week. The data collected from the personal information form and scales was entered into the IBM SPSS 24.0 software package for analysis. Statistical analyses were conducted using the Independent Sample T test and One-way Anova methods. The LSD test was employed to ascertain the dissimilarity between the groups. The Pearson correlation analysis was utilized to ascertain the association between the variables of love-hate and identity. In summary, it is evident that demographic factors, including gender and age, significantly influence fan perceptions and sports identification. In contrast, there is no substantial correlation observed between attributes such as level of education achieved and the frequency of engaging in sports activities, and the aforementioned outcomes. The significant associations identified between the Fan Love-Hate Scale and the Sports Fan Identification Scale underscore the complex relationship between fans’ emotional experiences and their connection to sports. Further investigations could be conducted to go deeper into the underlying causes that contribute to these relationships and inequalities, so resulting in a more thorough understanding of fan psychology.
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Novianty, Suci Marini. "Representasi Feminisme Radikal dalam K-Drama sebagai Resistensi Budaya Patriarki." Jurnal Mahardika Adiwidia 3, no. 2 (June 21, 2024): 110–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.36441/mahardikaadiwidi.v3i2.2198.

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This study examines the representation of radical feminism in the South Korean drama "Love to Hate You." Using a qualitative approach with a critical paradigm, the research employs Sara Mills' critical discourse analysis to understand how language and text structure create representations of women in the drama. The analysis aims to unveil how radical feminist values are reflected in dialogues, actions, and character relationships in the drama. The findings of the study suggest that the drama "Love to Hate You" provides a complex and nuanced representation of radical feminism. On the one hand, the drama portrays the protagonist, Yeo Mi Ran, as a strong and independent woman who resists patriarchal norms. Mi Ran rejects marriage, childbirth, and romantic relationships, and she pursues a career in law. On the other hand, the drama also shows how Mi Ran is still subject to patriarchal stereotypes and expectations. For example, Mi Ran is often portrayed as being cold and unemotional, and she is criticized for her lack of femininity. Overall, the study argues that the drama "Love to Hate You" provides a valuable contribution to the understanding of radical feminism in South Korean culture. The drama challenges traditional stereotypes about women, and it portrays a complex and multifaceted image of a radical feminist.
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Blum, Harold P. "Clinical and Developmental Dimensions of Hate." Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association 45, no. 2 (April 1997): 359–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/00030651970450020501.

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Bridging concepts of aggression, affect, and attitude, hate emerges during the process of separation-individuation concurrent with ego development and persisting intrapsychic conflict and fantasy. Rage precedes hate developmentally, though later the two are amalgamated both developmentally and clinically. Hate is the negative pole of ambivalence and is a component of all self- and object representations and object relationships. When excessive and unmodulated, hate interferes with object relations and personality development. Paradoxically, hate may also subserve adaptation and personality organization. Transference hate is often a greater problem for the psychoanalyst or psychotherapist than is transference love. Transference hate threatens the analyst's narcissism and neutrality and tests the analyst's tolerance and patience. The patient's intense hate is often experienced as a direct assault on the analytic relationship and the analytic process. Countertransference hate and the need to defend against it are of great clinical importance. Because it runs counter to analytic ideals and values, the analyst's hatred of the patient may be denied, minimized, rationalized, enacted, or vicariously gratified and may occasion great resistance to analytic self-scrutiny. Countertransference hate is often an unrecognized determinant in cases of analytic and therapeutic impasse. A classic contribution by D.W. Winnicott to the recognition and elucidation of countertransference hate is reevaluated.
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Gabbard, Glen O. "On Hate in Love Relationships: The Narcissism of Minor Differences Revisited." Psychoanalytic Quarterly 62, no. 2 (April 1993): 229–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21674086.1993.11927376.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Love-hate relationships"

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Johnson, James Henry. "Dating_MissRepresentation.Com: Black Women's Lived Love-Hate Relationship With Online Dating." OpenSIUC, 2017. https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/dissertations/1363.

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The increased use of online dating sites has further encouraged corporations’ attempts to capitalize on these mate-seeking trends. Match.com, eHarmony, and OkCupid are primary competitors in a growing market of individuals seeking out potential romantic partners. They offer several mainstream dating options as well as niche-dating sites. Similar to society at large where dating still occurs offline, scholars have revealed that racial hierarchies exist within various online platforms. As such, the roles of gender and ethnicity in online dating environments merit study. Specifically, the experiences of Black women who use Internet dating sites, a virtually unexplored demographic, form the basis of this dissertation. This study consisted of 16 interviews and a demographic survey, which were used to examine Black women’s online dating experiences from their perspectives to determine whether or not online dating sites are productive, love-seeking spaces. Data analysis was conducted utilizing a Google Form survey to collect demographic data and NVivo 11 qualitative software to help generate themes that guided analysis. Themes that emerged included: negative and positive perceptions from men; physical and non-physical attributes participants possessed that men found attractive; whether or not men’s perceptions impacted interview participants’ success or failure in online dating, and whether or not participants viewed their online dating experiences to be in line with those of other Black women. Participants discussed how perceptions from men online influenced their racially-gendered online dating experience.
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Heng, Edmund Wei-Loong. "Public relations in Singapore: The Love-Hate relationship with social media." Thesis, Heng, Edmund Wei-Loong (2012) Public relations in Singapore: The Love-Hate relationship with social media. Honours thesis, Murdoch University, 2012. https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/id/eprint/12988/.

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The growth of social media has undoubtedly impacted upon public relations practice even in non-liberal societies. In December 2011, operators of Singapore 19s metro train system, the Singapore Mass Rapid Transit (SMRT) Corporation, suffered a reputational crisis that led to the eventual resignation of its Chief Executive Officer as a result of social media. A series of logistic faults were reported on social media platforms by affected commuters through the use of mobile media technologies as the situations unfolded. This case is pivotal, as one of several in Singapore 19s recent history that has conclusively indicated a strategic and professional value to social media in public relations in a society typically known for its restrictive, non-liberal stance. This dissertation is a multidisciplinary investigation that relates to Grunig and Hunt 19s oft-unattainable, two-way symmetrical communication model. The impact of new media technologies will be analysed through crisis communication, a facet of public relations where social media can potentially be the most influential driving force. Acknowledging that existing data is not substantial enough to accurately support this thesis, it employs a qualitative research design backed by practitioner interviews in order to extract relevant and insightful accounts of industry perceptions regarding the practical utilisation of social media tools amongst professionals. As a result, this study represents the ongoing changes and evolutions being made to public relations as social media continues to evolve. In this thesis, I propose that social media has influenced the scope of public relations and organisational frameworks currently in Singapore, giving rise to a generation of empowered audiences, who need to be treated with far more caution and respect than ever before. Within this, I also highlight how the rise of the digital era has actually resulted in increased attention to the field of public relations. The SMRT crisis will be used as a key case study to illustrate the ongoing changes. The ultimate aim of this thesis is to examine how social media has impacted on public relations and crisis communication in an authoritarian context.
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Singh, Arvind. "A Dream Lost in Dream: A Love-Hate Relationship of an Alien with America." Thesis, University of North Texas, 2011. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc84277/.

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Exploring the theme of Diaspora, this paper is an accompanying document for the documentary, A Dream Lost in Dream. It sheds light on the purpose, and process of producing this documentary. The main purpose for the production of this documentary has been described as initiation of healthy and casual dialog between diverse populations in America. It emphasizes the importance of creating visual media targeting masses rather than the elite. It is argued that it can act as a tool of awareness, reducing anxiety in the society. It also embarks on the production journey of the documentary A Dream Lost in Dream. The film is a portrayal of an East Indian immigrant struggling between economic survival, family issues and passion to fly.
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Wells, Jerome B. "Angel of Tough Love and other stories." Thesis, 2000. http://hdl.handle.net/1957/32693.

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The overarching theme of these stories is the relationship between love and hate, especially the connection between kindness and violence. In this fictional world, love often begets hate, and hate, love: a man's capacity for empathy serves as the catalyst for an act of brutality; a character's loneliness, his desire for love, causes him to chivvy members of his church congregation, while the same character's unambiguous overtures of friendship produce revulsion in the narrator; the victim of a man's complicity coaxes him to take a beating that, in effect, heals him; and a sexual encounter, violent in its impersonality, its objectification of a woman, gives rise to a comment that awakens the abuser's conscience as well as his regard for his victim. One may undermine the other: in the story involving sexual abuse, the woman treats the men lovingly, like people, and in so doing erodes their ability to treat her as something less than human; a character's habitual spite finds its way into his marriage, damaging the most important (and the only loving) relationship in his life. And they sometimes exchange clothes: a man's attacks on his neighbor and the neighbor's quest for revenge mimic a courtship, are the beginnings of a relationship; the character who hurts his wife does it by perverting an act of love; friends and coworkers express affection by insulting one another and by pretending to fight. What is the point of this juxtaposition and mingling of supposed opposites? To be honest, I'm not sure I know. I wrote these stories without conscious intent, and gathered them into the same collection accidentally: there were others that didn't quite work, and which had nothing much to do with amity and strife, that might have been included, too, had they been better or more finished. Still, I, like any other reader, can divine a few meanings. With their frequent inversion and mingling of love and hate, these stories might serve as one piece of evidence that all things contain the kernel of their opposite. Given the right circumstances--enough time, a narrative--they will demonstrate affinity. This Hegelian interdependence of opposites implies a correlary--narratives procede by dialectic: love heads into hate, or hate into love, and the synthesis of these two spawns a hybrid possessing bits of its progenitors. "Angel of Tough Love" provides an example of this sublation: boy's complicitous response to a beating alienates him from himself--thesis; he accepts an invitation to enter a crucible of hate and love, to do the opposite of remaining a bystander--antithesis; he emerges whole and yet changed, at peace for the first time--synthesis. Another conclusion, one that does not contradict the first: if love may lead to hate and hate to love, then the value of each impulse and action depends on context. Fine motives, however pure, might produce ghastly results if a full understanding of circumstances, a broad and informed point of view, is not present, too: perspective, point of view, is seminal. And yet--with the possible exception of those with mystical gifts, who may rely on Dionysian rapture or its equivalent to grant them views of entire causal chains--our points of view are limited; we cannot know all the ramifications of our actions. (And, at least in one sense, it seems that we aren't supposed to know: a story hatched whole is bound to be boring and, well, predictable.) So we are left to examine our motives and anticipate what consequences we can. It's not much, but it will have to do. Love conquers all, sometimes. A kind word--or just an honestly felt one--may change a mind or an afternoon, now and then. We're all in the same dirt boat, heading somewhere, so we might as well use the oars provided and hope that our imaginations, incrementally, will point us in the right direction. Some of the time, we may row in concert.
Graduation date: 2001
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Fouweather, Ian. "Why we have such a love-hate relationship with work." 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/10454/13282.

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yes
Shock, horror, a new study shows the British public don’t like their jobs. Using smart phones researchers mapped the happiness of people in real time, while they went about their daily lives. And they discovered that people do not report feeling very happy at work.
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Ballance, Kimberly Laine. "Why municipalities have a love – hate relationship with PSAB: the direct and indirect impacts that PS 3150 guidelines have on municipal infrastructure planning." 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/1993/4385.

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This research project acknowledged that the introduction of PS 3150 guidelines were presented to Ontario municipalities as a new, unfunded mandated responsibility which was viewed by these municipalities to be an impossible challenge within the completion timeline. This research project identifies impacts that PS 3150 guidelines will have on infrastructure planning for municipalities, with a population of less than 5000, in Northern Ontario. The PS 3150 guidelines were created by the Public Sector Accounting Board (PSAB) of the Canadian Institute of Chartered Accountants (CICA) to outline the general process for public sector organizations to change from a modified accrual format to full accrual accounting complete with new financial statements. Municipalities have had to better account for both financial and non-financial assets when reporting on revenues and expenditures. The evaluation of the policy mandate outlined in PS 3150 guidelines has yet to be completed, however the impacts of the guidelines can be assessed based on the development and subsequent implementation of Tangible Capital Asset policies and asset management plans by municipal governments. The findings identified four key similarities among responses from the municipal representatives. The Impacts of PS 3150 legislation are primarily related to personnel, financial, planning, and technical issues. The key recommendation arising from the completion of this research is that municipalities need to move forward, pursue complete asset management plans, in order to demonstrate in a quantitative manner the costs associated with municipal infrastructure planning.
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Félix, Bruno Altino Teixeira. "Perdoar é humano : relatório realizado no âmbito da unidade letiva 3 : o perdão, do 4º ano de escolaridade da disciplina de Educação Moral e Religiosa Católica." Master's thesis, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/10400.14/28330.

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Relação, Perdão e Reconciliação. Três conceitos que envolvem uma “mixórdia de temáticas” e que implicam necessariamente um antes, um durante e um depois. Antes do perdão, vem a relação, no sentido de uma urgente necessidade do ser humano em construir laços consigo mesmo, com os outros e com Deus. Mas, porque o ser humano está longe de ser perfeito, o mal surpreende a vida, invade o seu espaço interior, deixa-o na inquietude de uma incompreensão instalada. E entre o mal que o ser humano pratica e o mal que o ser humano sofre, surge o perdão, como um abraço impensável, um sinal de esperança num futuro diferente, uma reinvenção de uma vida. É deste pressuposto que se pode falar de reconciliação, como o depois do perdão, como o resultado de uma decisão unilateral de amor, como premissa fundamental àquilo que todo o ser humano deve ser: “imagem e semelhança de Deus”.
Relationship, Forgiveness and Reconciliation. Three concepts which involve a kind of “melting pot” of ideas and which necessarily imply a before, a throughout and a after the events. Before the forgiveness comes the relationship, in the meaning of an urgent necessity of the human being in building bonds with himself, with the others and with God. However, as the human being is far from being perfect and faultless, the evil surprises life, invades its inner space and leaves the person in great concern with the feeling of misunderstood. And among the evil that is done to others and the one that is experienced comes the forgiveness, like an unthinkable hug, a sign of hope for a different future, a reinvention of life. It’s starting with this assumption that we can approach reconciliation, it’s what follows the forgiveness like the result of a unilateral decision of love, like fundamental principles of what a human being should be: “God image and likeness”.
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Books on the topic "Love-hate relationships"

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Schoenewolf, Gerald. The art of hating. Northvale, N.J: J. Aronson, 1991.

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Grizzle, Anne F. Mother love, mother hate: Breaking dependent love patterns in family relationships. New York: Fawcett Columbine, 1988.

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Aumer, Katherine, ed. The Psychology of Love and Hate in Intimate Relationships. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-39277-6.

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Aizer, Anna. Love, hate and murder: Commitment devices in violent relationships. Cambridge, Mass: National Bureau of Economic Research, 2007.

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Aizer, Anna. Love, hate and murder: Commitment devices in violent relationships. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, 2007.

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Savan, Glenn. Goldman's anatomy. New York: Bantam Books, 1994.

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Arterburn, Stephen. When someone you love is someone you hate. Dallas: Word Pub., 1988.

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Salecl, Renata. ( Per)versions of Love and Hate. London: Verso, 2000.

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Chen, Shenshen. Ni de xin shi kuai shan ji yi ti: Your heart is flash memory. Taibei Shi: Shang ye zhou kan chu ban gong si, 1999.

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1954-, Mann David, ed. Love and hate: Psychoanalytic perspectives. New York: Brunner-Routledge, 2002.

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Book chapters on the topic "Love-hate relationships"

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Shapiro, Jerrold Lee. "We Hate What We Fear: Interpersonal Hate from a Clinical Perspective." In The Psychology of Love and Hate in Intimate Relationships, 153–77. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-39277-6_9.

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Rempel, John K., and Siobhan Sutherland. "Hate: Theory and Implications for Intimate Relationships." In The Psychology of Love and Hate in Intimate Relationships, 105–29. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-39277-6_7.

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Hatfield, Elaine, Cyrille Feybesse, Victoria Narine, and Richard L. Rapson. "Passionate Love: Inspired by Angels or Demons?" In The Psychology of Love and Hate in Intimate Relationships, 65–82. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-39277-6_5.

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Aumer, Katherine, and Anne Cathrine Krebs Bahn. "Hate in Intimate Relationships as a Self-protective Emotion." In The Psychology of Love and Hate in Intimate Relationships, 131–51. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-39277-6_8.

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Jonason, Peter K., and Rhonda N. Balzarini. "Unweaving the Rainbow of Human Sexuality: A Review of One-Night Stands, Serious Romantic Relationships, and the Relationship Space in Between." In The Psychology of Love and Hate in Intimate Relationships, 13–28. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-39277-6_2.

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Ziegler, Ali, and Terri D. Conley. "The Importance and Meaning of Sexual Fantasies in Intimate Relationships." In The Psychology of Love and Hate in Intimate Relationships, 29–45. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-39277-6_3.

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Aumer, Katherine. "Introduction to the Psychology of Love and Hate in Intimate Relationships." In The Psychology of Love and Hate in Intimate Relationships, 1–9. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-39277-6_1.

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Matsick, Jes L., Terri D. Conley, and Amy C. Moors. "The Science of Female Orgasms: Pleasing Female Partners in Casual and Long-Term Relationships." In The Psychology of Love and Hate in Intimate Relationships, 47–63. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-39277-6_4.

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Burris, Christopher T., and Rebecca Leitch. "Your Pain, My Gain: The Interpersonal Context of Sadism." In The Psychology of Love and Hate in Intimate Relationships, 85–103. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-39277-6_6.

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Grassi, Paolo. "1,460 Days of Love and Hate: An Ethnographic Account of a Layered Job." In The Urban Book Series, 99–108. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-19748-2_7.

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AbstractBuilding on four years of ethnographic fieldwork carried out in the office of the Mapping San Siro action-research group (Department of Architecture and Urban Studies, Polytechnic University of Milan) in one of the main social housing neighbourhoods of Milan, in this contribution I will investigate the role and meaning of the Urban Living Labs (ULL) from an ‘internal’ perspective. An ongoing process of building relationships and caring for a space has allowed me to develop a reflection on multifaceted dimensions of daily life in the neighbourhood. Moreover, through anthropological literature, I will critically analyse the frustrations often experienced by researchers involved in fieldwork and planning. These frustrations highlight issues that go beyond the neighbourhood, showing the territorial dimension of the space. I will then highlight some ethical implications as clues that offer a more grounded understanding of daily life, rather than solving those implications with ready-made answers.
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Conference papers on the topic "Love-hate relationships"

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Brangier, Eric, and Blandine Brangier. "What do you like or dislike about your work? First explorations on a general feeling of work." In 13th International Conference on Applied Human Factors and Ergonomics (AHFE 2022). AHFE International, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.54941/ahfe1002236.

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Workers habitually say « I love my job » or « I hate my work » to define what they like or dislike about their professional situation. Thus, love and hate of work are often confused with other concepts: pleasure, suffering, commitment, satisfaction, well-being... Rare are the definitions of love or hate of work. The purpose of this paper is threefold. First, it proposes a conceptualization of the love and hate of work, as a “general feeling of work”. Second, it presents an automated textual analysis (performed with the IRaMuTeQ system) on 7359 French employees in 29 companies. Third, it gives recommendations for promoting love of work and reducing hate of work. On the one hand, professional opportunities, positive relationships, autonomy, diversity, work content develop love, and on the other hand, lack of opportunity, deleterious relationships, hierarchical failures, excessive demands, and poor working conditions lead to dislike job.
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Bazarhanova, Anar, Jesse Yli-Huumo, and Kari Smolander. "Love and Hate Relationships in a Platform Ecosystem: A case of Finnish Electronic Identity Management." In Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences. Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.24251/hicss.2018.187.

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Zizka, Laura, and Gaby Probst. "EMBRACING TECHNOLOGY TO ENHANCE TEACHING AND LEARNING: A LOVE/HATE RELATIONSHIP IN HIGHER EDUCATION INSTITUTIONS." In 15th International Conference on Education and New Learning Technologies. IATED, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.21125/edulearn.2023.0246.

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POP, Tiberiu. "Reflexive Design and the Consumer’s Expectations." In The International Conference of Doctoral Schools “George Enescu” National University of Arts Iaşi, Romania. Artes Publishing House UNAGE Iasi, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.35218/icds-2023-0026.

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Design is a term that is paradoxically (or not) harder to define these days. Its often-theoretical ramifications make a clear and univocal definition even more difficult to state In 2005, Donald Norman mentioned three levels of design: visceral, behavioural and reflexive in his book Why We Love (or Hate) Everyday Things. Design hybrids is yet another term that has been introduced into the specialized vocabulary lately as a result of designers’ attempt to go above and beyond product design, graphic design, environmental design, furniture design, interaction design, etc. In 1896, Louis Sullivan formulated the principle “form comes after function”. After WWI, theorists such as Theo van Doesburg, Walter Gropius and Le Corbusier, suggested a more radical tendency: “form comes after utility and meaning”. The new context suggests a more complex approach, i.e. “form observes expectations”, as a follow-up of Raymond Loewy’s MAYA (Most Advanced Yet Acceptable) principle. The present study is based on the transdisciplinarity of design1 , on reflexive design as a means of approach as well as on their relationship.
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Kennedy, Brandan P., Laura Fitzmaurice, Y. Raymond Chan, Barbara Chaparro, Sarah D. Fouquet, and Brady Patzer. "The Love/hate Relationship of Tablets in Electronic Medical Records: A Usability Study of a Native Emr Application for Mobile Devices." In Selection of Abstracts From NCE 2016. American Academy of Pediatrics, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1542/peds.141.1_meetingabstract.8.

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Reports on the topic "Love-hate relationships"

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Aizer, Anna, and Pedro Dal Bó. Love, Hate and Murder: Commitment Devices in Violent Relationships. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, October 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w13492.

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