Academic literature on the topic 'Male friends'

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Journal articles on the topic "Male friends"

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Marshall, Michael. "…while male chimps benefit from friends." New Scientist 251, no. 3349 (August 2021): 20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0262-4079(21)01499-8.

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Sears, Heather A., Joanna Graham, and Anna Campbell. "Adolescent boys' intentions of seeking help from male friends and female friends." Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology 30, no. 6 (November 2009): 738–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.appdev.2009.02.004.

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Stinson, Linda, and William Ickes. "Empathic accuracy in the interactions of male friends versus male strangers." Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 62, no. 5 (1992): 787–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/0022-3514.62.5.787.

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Lam, Joseph. "Male Bonding in Ming China." NAN NÜ 9, no. 1 (2007): 70–110. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/138768007x171722.

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AbstractMaking friends and making music are two fundamental activities through which people construct their personal identities and social relationships in their historical, cultural, and engendered times and spaces. To probe such activities as revealing facets of Ming history and culture, this essay presents three case studies of Ming men making music and bonding with male friends. To highlight the expressive, cultural, and social significance of music, this essay postulates that music catalyzed male bonding in Ming China by providing a tool, a site, and a process for Ming men to express and negotiate their masculine desires, identities, and roles.
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Meere, Michael. "Just Friends? Queering Male–Male Amity in Jean de Beaubreuil’s Regulus (1582)." Exemplaria 32, no. 4 (October 1, 2020): 304–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10412573.2020.1846342.

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Magen, Eran, and Paul A. Konasewich. "Women Support Providers Are More Susceptible Than Men to Emotional Contagion Following Brief Supportive Interactions." Psychology of Women Quarterly 35, no. 4 (November 23, 2011): 611–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0361684311423912.

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People in distress often turn to friends for emotional support. Ironically, although receiving emotional support contributes to emotional and physical health, providing emotional support may be distressing as a result of emotional contagion. Women have been found to be more susceptible than men to emotional contagion in certain contexts, but no studies examined the context of providing support to a troubled friend in a naturalistic setting. Our exploratory study aimed to test for gender differences in emotional contagion as a result of offering emotional support to a troubled friend. We studied naturalistic informal supportive interactions among 48 pairs of friends. Following an 8-min interaction with a troubled friend, (a) women were more likely than men to experience a deterioration in their positive emotional state and (b) changes in women’s emotional state were positively correlated with changes in their troubled friends’ emotional state, whereas changes in male support providers’ emotional state were unrelated to changes in their troubled friends’ emotional state. These results suggest that women are more susceptible than men to emotional contagion following brief interactions with a troubled friend, thereby highlighting the importance of conducting additional research into the costs and benefits of exchanging emotional support among friends.
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Montepare, Joann M., and Cynthia Vega. "Women's Vocal Reactions to Intimate and Casual Male Friends." Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin 14, no. 1 (March 1988): 103–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0146167288141011.

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Dittmar, Norbert. "Grammaticalization in Second Language Acquisition." Studies in Second Language Acquisition 14, no. 3 (September 1992): 249–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0272263100011104.

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SingularNominative—Mein guter Freund, my good friend. Genitive—Meines guten Freundes, of my good friend. Dative—Meinem guten Freund, to my good friend. Accusative—Meinen guten Freund, my good friend.PluralNominative—Meine guten Freunde, my good friends. Genitive—Meiner guten Freunde, of my good friends. Dative—Meinen guten Freunden, to my good friends. Accusative—Meine guten Freunde, my good friends.Now let the candidate for the asylum try to memorize those variations, and see how soon he will be elected. One might better go without friends in Germany than to take all this trouble about them. I have shown what a bother it is to decline a good (male) friend; well this is only a third of the work, for there is a variety of new distortions of the adjective to be learned when the object is feminine, and still another when the object is neuter. Now there are more adjectives in this language than there are black cats in Switzerland, and they must all be as elaborately declined as the example above suggested. Difficult? Troublesome? (Mark Twain, ‘The Awful German Language,’ in Twain, 1879, pp. 271–272)
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Ayotte, Brian, Clare Mehta, and Jacqueline Alfonso. "Health Communication With Same-Sex and Other-Sex Friends in Emerging Adulthood." International Journal of Aging and Human Development 85, no. 3 (December 28, 2016): 231–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0091415016680066.

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Objective We examined health-related communication between same-sex and other-sex friends and how communication was related to health-related behavior. Participants Data from 243 emerging adults attending college ( Mage = 18.96, SD = 1.43; 55.6% male) were analyzed. Methods Participants completed measures assessing the frequency in which they talked about and made plans to engage in exercise and nutrition-related behaviors with friends, as well as how often they engaged in exercise and nutrition-related behaviors. Results In general, participants reported more health-related communication with same-sex friends. Health-related communication with same-sex friends was positively related to health behaviors for men and women. However, the pattern of results differed for men and women depending on the topic of communication and the behavior being examined. Conclusion Our study extends the literature by examining the role of sex of friends in health communication and planning and how interactions with friends relate to health-promoting behavior.
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Dunn, Kerri F., and Gloria Cowan. "Social Influence Strategies Among Japanese and American College Women." Psychology of Women Quarterly 17, no. 1 (March 1993): 39–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1471-6402.1993.tb00675.x.

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Social influence strategies of 40 Japanese and 41 American college women were compared. With the use of a free-response format, respondents were asked to describe how they get their way with their mother, father, male teacher/boss, female teacher/boss, male friends, and female friends. Contrary to expectations, content analysis indicated that Japanese women reported using strong and neutral strategies more frequently and weak strategies less frequently than American women. American women used manipulation (especially sexual manipulation) more frequently and reasoning less frequently than Japanese women. Analyses by target of influence indicated that these differences were not found when the target was a female friend but were demonstrated across most of the other targets.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Male friends"

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Mehta, Clare M. "An examination of factors contributing to adolescents' proportion of same-sex friends." Morgantown, W. Va. : [West Virginia University Libraries], 2006. https://eidr.wvu.edu/etd/documentdata.eTD?documentid=4853.

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Johansson, Cecilia. "Friends with nature : Nature and male bonding in Steinbeck's "Of Mice and Men" and Kerouac's "On the Road"." Thesis, Linnaeus University, School of Language and Literature, 2010. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:vxu:diva-6921.

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Keddie, Amanda, and edu au jillj@deakin edu au mikewood@deakin edu au wildol@deakin edu au kimg@deakin. "Little boys: the potency of peer culture in shaping masculinities." Deakin University. School of Education / School of Social & Cultural Studies, 2001. http://tux.lib.deakin.edu.au./adt-VDU/public/adt-VDU20041216.100720.

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This study explores the peer group understandings of five male friends between the ages of six and eight years and seeks to examine the ways in which the group’s social dynamics interact to define, regulate and maintain dominant and collective understandings of masculinities. Within a self-selected affinity context, and drawing on their lived and imagined experiences, the boys’ enact and interpret their social worlds. Adopting the principles of ethnography within a framework of feminist poststructuralism and drawing on theories of ‘groupness’ and gender(ed) embodiment, the boys’ understandings of masculinities are captured and interpreted. The key analytic foci are directed towards examining the role of power in the social production of collective schoolboy knowledges, and understanding the processes through which boys subjectify and are subjectified, through social but also bodily discourses. The boys’ constructions of peer group masculinities are (re)presented through a narrative methodology which foregrounds my interpretation of the group’s personal and social relevances and seeks to be inductive in ways that ‘bring to life’ the boys’ stories. The study illuminates the potency of peer culture in shaping and regulating the boys’ dominant understandings of masculinity. Within this culture strong essentialist and hierarchical values are imported to support a range of gender(ed) and sexual dualisms. Here patriarchal adult culture is regularly mimicked and distorted. Underpinned by constructions of ‘femininity’ as the negative ‘other’, dominant masculinities are embodied, cultivated and championed through physical dominance, physical risk, aggression and violence. Through feminist poststructural analysis which enables a theorising of the boys’ subjectivities as fluid, tenuous and often characterised by contradiction and resistance, there exists a potential for interrupting and re-working particular masculinities. Within this framework, more affirmative but equally legitimate understandings and embodiments can be explored. The study presents a warrant for working with early childhood affinity groups to disrupt and contest the dominance and hierarchy of peer culture in an effort to counter-act broader gendered and heterosexist global, state and institutional structures. Framing these assertions is an understanding of the peer context as not only self-limiting and productive of hierarchies, but enabling and generative of affirmative subjectivities.
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Smith, Nathaniel M. "How to Make Friends and Maximize Value." The Ohio State University, 2016. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1461096878.

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Raj, Prateek. "The friends we make : networks, culture and institutions." Thesis, University College London (University of London), 2018. http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/10052256/.

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Who are our friends and what is the nature of networks we make, can have macro-level implications on society. There are relationship-based economies, and there are economies that rely on arm’s length interactions. This thesis studies how relationship-based groups like merchant guilds and caste can persist due to a lack of incentives and information, or because of salience of social identities. It also explores the factors that can widen the social circle and give rise to impersonal and cosmopolitan social systems. In the second chapter, I develop a theoretical model to show how difficult it is for relationship-based economies to be honest to and trusting of strangers and to transition into impersonal economies. I find a narrow set of conditions under which generalized trust in strangers can emerge and sustain in an impersonal economy. In the third chapter, I explore the transition of guild-based economies of Northwestern Europe into market-based economies in the sixteenth century. I study the unique interaction of economic and technological factors that drove such a change. I find that cities in the sixteenth century, where monopolies of merchant guilds declined, were at the Atlantic coast and had significantly higher levels of printing in the fifteenth century. In the fourth chapter, with Paola Sapienza and Luigi Zingales, I examine the effect of caste censuses of 1901 in making the caste identity salient today. We study its impact on networking and governance and find that in regions where district committees were formed to rank network in 1901, households have a smaller social circle as they have fewer out-of-caste networks with professionals. They also have a poorer quality of government. Overall, the thesis develops a detailed picture of how social structures historically evolve, and how trust, access to information and social identity are the forces that shape them.
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Andersson, Louise, and Sara Klingberg. "How to make ambassadors turn their friends into ambassadors." Thesis, KTH, Industriell ekonomi och organisation (Inst.), 2012. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-98033.

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With the internet's rampage, the possibilities for consumer-driven distribution of information are massive. One way to use this inter-consumer approach is to encourage existing customers, or ambassadors, to invite their friends and family to become a part of the brands success. But how can companies motivate existing customers to play a more important role in the brand expansion? The purpose of this thesis is to explore the motives and triggers for existing customers to invite friends, to become new customers. This by combining the empirical data collected from telephone interviews and web surveys, with theories on brand equity and inter-consumer marketing. To delimit the thesis, only motives connected to the marketing of premium products with a high customer involvement have been analyzed. For this purpose, Mackmyra Svensk Whisky AB was chosen. The empirical delimitation of this thesis is thus the customers of Mackmyra. The results showed that the motives that are perceived motivational differ from person to person. The incentives identified as more prevalent than others were access to unique products, priority to limited editions, possibility to experience the company from the inside, invitations to exclusive events, price reductions and points to exchange for merchandise.The identified incentives were segmented. After the segmentation, every company should carefully consider which segments to target, as those best suited for incentive programs differs from case to case.
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Stuermer, Matthias Emmanuel. "How firms make friends : communities in private-collective innovation /." [S.l.] : [s.n.], 2009. http://e-collection.ethbib.ethz.ch/show?type=diss&nr=18630.

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Power, Susannah. "Psychological adjustment of children with learning disabilities, do friends make the difference?" Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1999. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk1/tape10/PQDD_0003/NQ41278.pdf.

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Whiteley, Bryn Elizabeth. "Diamonds: Cultural Representations and Transformations of a "Girl's Best Friend"." Diss., Virginia Tech, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/10919/71382.

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The great success of the advertising industry in the 1950s created a diamond culture where diamonds are continuously associated with images of love and devotion. With all of the diamond's positive associations, no one could have imagined that such a precious jewel could have negative connotations. Yet in the 1990s, the label "blood diamond" emerged and became widely correlated with torture, rape, child labor, and environmental destruction. My three- manuscript dissertation covers the following topics: how diamond jewelry has become ingrained in American consumer culture, how lab-made diamond substitutes create new politics, and how diamonds created from ashes complicate consumers' relationship with diamond jewelry. These three manuscripts cover a series of interconnected ideas about symbolism and imagery of the diamond. In the first manuscript I present a history of how advertisements have influenced American consumer culture. The second manuscript elaborates on the themes established in the first manuscript by examining the political nature of lab-made diamonds in relation to American consumer culture. And finally, in the third manuscript the images presented in the first manuscript become even more complicated when the end product is literally made from ashes. Lab-made diamonds challenge traditional images of natural stones in a way that forces consumers to confront, and perhaps revise, the way they think about diamonds.
Ph. D.
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Brockbank, J. Wyatt. "Better Speakers Make More Friends: Predictors of Social Network Development Among Study-Abroad Students." BYU ScholarsArchive, 2011. https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/2686.

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Social network development has been studied in the social sciences for the last several decades, but little work has applied social network theory to study-abroad research. This study seeks to quantitatively describe factors that predict social network formation among study-abroad students while in the host countries. Social networks were measured in terms of the number of friends the students made, the number of distinct social groups reported, and the number of friends within those groups. The Study Abroad Social Interaction Questionnaire was compared against these pre-trip factors: intercultural competence, target-language proficiency, prior missionary experience, gender, study-abroad program, neuroticism, extroversion, agreeableness, openness to new experience, agreeableness, and conscientiousness. Results showed that pre-trip oral proficiency in the target language was the strongest predictor of the number of friends made in-country. Certain programs showed stronger predictive statistics in terms of size of largest social group, number of social groups, and number of friends made. A distinction is made between total number of friends and number of friends who are more likely to be native speakers. Neither intercultural competence nor personality showed a significant correlation with the number of friendships made during study abroad.
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Books on the topic "Male friends"

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Carre, John Le. Absolute friends. Leicester: Charnwood, 2004.

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Carre, John Le. Absolute friends. London: Coronet, 2004.

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Carre, John Le. Absolute friends. London: Sceptre, 2006.

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Men without friends. Nashville: T. Nelson Publishers, 1990.

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Best friends. Waterville, Me: Thorndike Press, 2003.

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Alberto, Moravia. Two friends =: I due amici. New York: Other Press, 2011.

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Friends, and other perishables. Waterville, Me: Five Star, 2004.

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Best friends: A novel. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2003.

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Tibbetts, Mike. Three friends =: (tre amici). Studio City, CA: Players Press, 2003.

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Carre, John Le. Absolute friends. New York: Little, Brown, 2005.

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Book chapters on the topic "Male friends"

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Holmberg, Arthur. "Friends without Benefits." In David Mamet and Male Friendship, 121–48. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137305190_7.

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McCarthy, Barry, and Emily McCarthy. "Female–Male Sexual Equity: Being Intimate and Erotic Friends." In Couple Sexuality After 60, 55–68. New York: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003044888-5.

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Coates, Jennifer. "‘My Mind Is with You’: Story Sequences in the Talk of Male Friends [2001]." In Women, Men and Everyday Talk, 169–84. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137314949_9.

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Stevenson, Pablo R., Diego A. Zárate, Mónica A. Ramírez, and Francisco Henao-Díaz. "Social Interactions and Proximal Spacing in Woolly Monkeys: Lonely Females Looking for Male Friends." In Dispersing Primate Females, 45–71. Tokyo: Springer Japan, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-4-431-55480-6_3.

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Edge, Charles. "Make Friends: Develop Partnerships." In Build, Run, and Sell Your Apple Consulting Practice, 187–97. Berkeley, CA: Apress, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4842-3835-6_6.

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Liddon, Louise, Roger Kingerlee, Martin Seager, and John A. Barry. "What Are the Factors That Make a Male-Friendly Therapy?" In The Palgrave Handbook of Male Psychology and Mental Health, 671–94. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-04384-1_32.

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Dlugos, Jenn, and Charlie Hatton. "Man's Freaky Best Friends." In Things That Make You Go YUCK!, 19–32. New York: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003239024-3.

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Price, Heather E. "My Friends Made Me Do It." In Interpersonal Relationships in Education, 213–29. Rotterdam: SensePublishers, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-6209-701-8_13.

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Black, Graham. "Museums and Tourism: Time to Make Friends." In Heritage and Tourism in Britain and Ireland, 263–78. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-52083-8_17.

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Brooks, Gary R. "Male-friendly psychotherapy for boys and men." In Beyond the crisis of masculinity: A transtheoretical model for male-friendly therapy., 85–112. Washington: American Psychological Association, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/12073-005.

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Conference papers on the topic "Male friends"

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Chen, Jilin, Werner Geyer, Casey Dugan, Michael Muller, and Ido Guy. "Make new friends, but keep the old." In the SIGCHI Conference. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1518701.1518735.

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Dinh, Thai Hoang, Mohammad Abu Alsheikh, Shimin Gong, Dusit Niyato, Zhu Han, and Ying-Chang Liang. "Defend Jamming Attacks: How to Make Enemies Become Friends." In GLOBECOM 2019 - 2019 IEEE Global Communications Conference. IEEE, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/globecom38437.2019.9014094.

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Kairamkonda, Dheeraj Dhanvee, Sree Chandana Kodimela, and Harish Kuchulakanti. "Blind Mate: A Friend to The Blind." In 2019 IEEE 16th India Council International Conference (INDICON). IEEE, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/indicon47234.2019.9028921.

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Okubo, Masashi, and Satoshi Nobuta. "Development of avatar generating system by constructing portraits made by friends." In 2013 IEEE International Symposium on Robot and Human Interactive Communication (RO-MAN). IEEE, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/roman.2013.6628541.

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Boldeiu, A., P. Nadejde, E. Vasile, I. Mihalache, M. Simion, and M. Kusko. "Metallic nanoparticles — How to make them friendly." In 2017 International Semiconductor Conference (CAS). IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/smicnd.2017.8101156.

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Ruijten, Peter A. M., and Raymond H. Cuijpers. "Does a friendly robot make you feel better?" In 2019 28th IEEE International Conference on Robot and Human Interactive Communication (RO-MAN). IEEE, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ro-man46459.2019.8956368.

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Zimmerle, Daniel, Casey Quinn, Jason Quinn, Maggie Clark, and John Volckens. "Can Modifications Make Electric Pressure Cookers ‘Minigrid Friendly?’." In 2020 IEEE Global Humanitarian Technology Conference (GHTC). IEEE, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ghtc46280.2020.9342947.

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Xie, Jin, and Xing Li. "Make best use of social networks via more valuable friend recommendations." In 2012 2nd International Conference on Consumer Electronics, Communications and Networks (CECNet). IEEE, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/cecnet.2012.6201864.

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Junak, Jozef. "GREEN CONCRETE: ENVIRONMENTALLY FRIENDLY CONCRETE MADE FROM ALTERNATIVE MATERIALS." In 15th International Multidisciplinary Scientific GeoConference SGEM2015. Stef92 Technology, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgem2015/b62/s26.020.

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Zave, Pamela. "How software architecture can make an application-friendly internet." In the joint ACM SIGSOFT conference -- QoSA and ACM SIGSOFT symposium -- ISARCS. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2000259.2000261.

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Reports on the topic "Male friends"

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Cao, Huantian, Richard Wool, Emma Sidoriak, Henley Cook, and Shijin Gong. Fashion Prototypes Made from Environmentally Friendly Leather Substitute (Eco-Leather). Ames: Iowa State University, Digital Repository, November 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.31274/itaa_proceedings-180814-104.

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Binette, Joanne. 2016 City of Maple Grove, MN Age-Friendly Community Survey: Annotated Questionnaire. AARP Research, October 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.26419/res.00132.028.

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Taljaard, Hanri, Nadine Cynthia Sonnenberg, and Bertha Jacobs. Male Consumers' Motivation and Intent to acquire Eco-friendly Apparel in the South African Emerging Market Context. Ames: Iowa State University, Digital Repository, November 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.31274/itaa_proceedings-180814-1395.

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Martínez Villarreal, Déborah, Cristina Parilli, Carlos Scartascini, and Alberto Simpser. Research Insights: Unintended Byproducts of News Coverage about Noncompliance: A Social Norms Exploration. Inter-American Development Bank, May 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0003256.

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Social norms used in communications can help/hurt compliance with public health guidelines. In Mexico, a survey experiment was conducted to explore the knowledge-behavior gap in social distancing noncompliance. Despite believing that attending social gatherings is inappropriate, communicating to a person that friends are highly likely to attend the party increases the probability of generalizing others attendance and possibly their own. Believing that it is appropriate to attend a party during COVID-19 and knowing that most friends will go does not make one more likely to guess that a person will attend that party than if one believed it was not appropriate to attend the party. This represents a contradiction.
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Binette, Joanne. AARP 2016 Age-Friendly Community Survey: City of Maple Grove, MN: Methodology Report. AARP Research, October 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.26419/res.00132.029.

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Binette, Joanne. Livability For All in the City of Maple Grove, MN: An Age-Friendly Community Survey of Residents Age 50-Plus. AARP Research, October 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.26419/res.00132.027.

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Cox, Jeremy. The unheard voice and the unseen shadow. Norges Musikkhøgskole, August 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.22501/nmh-ar.621671.

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The French composer Francis Poulenc had a profound admiration and empathy for the writings of the Spanish poet Federico García Lorca. That empathy was rooted in shared aspects of the artistic temperament of the two figures but was also undoubtedly reinforced by Poulenc’s fellow-feeling on a human level. As someone who wrestled with his own homosexuality and who kept his orientation and his relationships apart from his public persona, Poulenc would have felt an instinctive affinity for a figure who endured similar internal conflicts but who, especially in his later life and poetry, was more open about his sexuality. Lorca paid a heavy price for this refusal to dissimulate; his arrest in August 1936 and his assassination the following day, probably by Nationalist militia, was accompanied by taunts from his killers about his sexuality. Everything about the Spanish poet’s life, his artistic affinities, his personal predilections and even the relationship between these and his death made him someone to whom Poulenc would be naturally drawn and whose untimely demise he would feel keenly and might wish to commemorate musically. Starting with the death of both his parents while he was still in his teens, reinforced by the sudden loss in 1930 of an especially close friend, confidante and kindred spirit, and continuing throughout the remainder of his life with the periodic loss of close friends, companions and fellow-artists, Poulenc’s life was marked by a succession of bereavements. Significantly, many of the dedications that head up his compositions are ‘to the memory of’ the individual named. As Poulenc grew older, and the list of those whom he had outlived lengthened inexorably, his natural tendency towards the nostalgic and the elegiac fused with a growing sense of what might be termed a ‘survivor’s anguish’, part of which he sublimated into his musical works. It should therefore come as no surprise that, during the 1940s, and in fulfilment of a desire that he had felt since the poet’s death, he should turn to Lorca for inspiration and, in the process, attempt his own act of homage in two separate works: the Violin Sonata and the ‘Trois Chansons de Federico García Lorca’. This exposition attempts to unfold aspects of the two men’s aesthetic pre-occupations and to show how the parallels uncovered cast reciprocal light upon their respective approaches to the creative process. It also examines the network of enfolded associations, musical and autobiographical, which link Poulenc’s two compositions commemorating Lorca, not only to one another but also to a wider circle of the composer’s works, especially his cycle setting poems of Guillaume Apollinaire: ‘Calligrammes’. Composed a year after the ‘Trois Chansons de Federico García Lorca’, this intricately wrought collection of seven mélodies, which Poulenc saw as the culmination of an intensive phase in his activity in this genre, revisits some of ‘unheard voices’ and ‘unseen shadows’ enfolded in its predecessor. It may be viewed, in part, as an attempt to bring to fuller resolution the veiled but keenly-felt anguish invoked by these paradoxical properties.
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Prysyazhnyi, Mykhaylo. UNIQUE, BUT UNCOMPLETED PROJECTS (FROM HISTORY OF THE UKRAINIAN EMIGRANT PRESS). Ivan Franko National University of Lviv, March 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.30970/vjo.2021.50.11093.

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In the article investigational three magazines which went out after Second World war in Germany and Austria in the environment of the Ukrainian emigrants, is «Theater» (edition of association of artists of the Ukrainian stage), «Student flag» (a magazine of the Ukrainian academic young people is in Austria), «Young friends» (a plastoviy magazine is for senior children and youth). The thematic structure of magazines, which is inferior the association of different on age, is considered, by vital experience and professional orientation of people in the conditions of the forced emigration, paid regard to graphic registration of magazines, which, without regard to absence of the proper publisher-polydiene bases, marked structuralness and expressiveness. A repertoire of periodicals of Ukrainian migration is in the American, English and French areas of occupation of Germany and Austria after Second world war, which consists of 200 names, strikes the tipologichnoy vseokhopnistyu and testifies to the high intellectual level of the moved persons, desire of yaknaynovishe, to realize the considerable potential in new terms with hope on transference of the purchased experience to Ukraine. On ruins of Europe for two-three years the network of the press, which could be proud of the European state is separately taken, is created. Different was a period of their appearance: from odnogo-dvokh there are to a few hundred numbers, that it is related to intensive migration of Ukrainians to the USA, Canada, countries of South America, Australia. But indisputable is a fact of forming of conceptions of newspapers and magazines, which it follows to study, doslidzhuvati and adjust them to present Ukrainian realities. Here not superfluous will be an example of a few editions on the thematic range of which the names – «Plastun» specify, «Skob», «Mali druzi», «Sonechko», «Yunackiy shliah», «Iyzhak», «Lys Mykyta» (satire, humour), «Literaturna gazeta», «Ukraina і svit», «Ridne slovo», «Hrystyianskyi shliah», «Golos derzhavnyka», «Ukrainskyi samostiynyk», «Gart», «Zmag» (sport), «Litopys politviaznia», «Ukrains’ka shkola», «Torgivlia i promysel», «Gospodars’ko-kooperatyvne zhyttia», «Ukrainskyi gospodar», «Ukrainskyi esperantist», «Radiotehnik», «Politviazen’», «Ukrainskyi selianyn» Considering three riznovektorni magazines «Teatr» (edition of Association Mistciv the Ukrainian Stage), «Studentskyi prapor» (a magazine of the Ukrainian academic young people is in Austria), «Yuni druzi» (a plastoviy magazine is for senior children and youth) assert that maintenance all three magazines directed on creation of different on age and by the professional orientation of national associations for achievement of the unique purpose – cherishing and maintainance of environments of ukrainstva, identity, in the conditions of strange land. Without regard to unfavorable publisher-polydiene possibilities, absence of financial support and proper encouragement, release, followed the intensive necessity of concentration of efforts for achievement of primary purpose – receipt and re-erecting of the Ukrainian State.
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