shared time
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2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 1-29
Author(s):  
Jin-Sook Lee ◽  
Yun-Suk Lee

2021 ◽  
pp. 095679762110269
Author(s):  
Ximena Garcia-Rada ◽  
Tami Kim

This work documents a relationship-maintenance strategy that individuals use when they perceive their time with a partner as scarce (vs. abundant): choosing to share extraordinary experiences (i.e., those characterized by uniqueness and superiority; pilot study N = 57). Study 1 first tested this notion in a social media experiment ( N = 35,848 ad impressions on 25,148 adults). Study 2 ( N = 393 adults) suggested that individuals choose extraordinary experiences as a way of sustaining the focal relationship, which leads them to prioritize extraordinariness over other attributes, such as quantity (Study 3: N = 100 adults) and convenience (Study 4: N = 799 adults). Consistent with the relationship-maintenance account, results showed that this prioritization of extraordinary experiences when facing shared time scarcity occurs only when individuals have a strong relationship-maintenance goal (Study 4). Taken together, these studies advance our understanding of the antecedents of experiential choices in close relationships.


2021 ◽  
pp. 146879412110419
Author(s):  
Rachel Rosen

The staccato rhythms of experiential time remain obscured in much of the literature on participatory research, where time is treated as a reassuring constant – a backdrop for human activity. This article addresses the discordances between lived temporalities and existing theorisations of participatory methodologies. It takes participatory research with lone child migrants as a particularly rich case to think with, given the proliferation of contradictory and often punitive applications of time these young people encounter in their interactions with migration and welfare regimes. The core argument developed is that unless temporality is given due theoretical and methodological attention, aims of contesting and unsettling inequities through participatory research will have limited success and can wind up reproducing exclusions and oppressions. In response to these critiques, the paper temporalizes participatory research through three reconstructions: working with and against time, de-centring shared time and collectivising the time of participatory research.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-9
Author(s):  
Ana Gama ◽  
Ana Rita Pedro ◽  
Maria João Leote de Carvalho ◽  
Ana Esteves Guerreiro ◽  
Vera Duarte ◽  
...  

The measures implemented to combat the COVID-19 pandemic led populations to confinement at home, with increased risk of domestic violence due to extended shared time between victims and offenders. Evidence on domestic violence in times of pandemic is lacking. This study examines the occurrence of domestic violence, associated factors and help seeking during the COVID-19 pandemic. An online survey was conducted in Portugal between April and October 2020 by NOVA National School of Public Health. The survey was disseminated through partner networks, media, and institutions working within the scope of violence. Data were collected on the experience of domestic violence, and help seeking during the pandemic. In a total of 1,062 respondents, 146 (13.7%) reported having suffered domestic violence during the pandemic, including psychological (13.0%, n = 138), sexual (1.0%, n = 11), and physical (0.9%, n = 10) abuse. Overall, the lower the age, the more the reported domestic violence. Also, a higher proportion of participants who perceived difficulties to make ends meet during the pandemic reported domestic violence. Differences between women and men and across educational levels on reported domestic violence were not statistically significant. Bivariate logistic analyses showed that, among women, reported domestic violence was more likely among those with up to secondary education compared to higher education. Most of the victims did not seek help (62.3%), the main reasons being considering it unnecessary, that help would not change anything, and feeling embarrassed about what had happened. Only 4.3% of the victims sought police help. The most common reasons for not coming forward to form a complaint were considering the abuse was not severe and believing the police would not do anything. Our findings indicate that domestic violence during the COVID-19 pandemic was experienced by both sexes and across different age groups. There is a need for investing in specific support systems for victims of domestic violence to be applied to pandemic contexts, especially targeting those in more vulnerable situations and potentially underserved.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julia Vigl ◽  
Hannah Strauss ◽  
Francesca Talamini ◽  
Marcel

The outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic has had a large impact on various aspects of life, but questions about its effect on close relationships remain largely unanswered. In the present study, we examined changes in relationship satisfaction at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic by using a sample of 3,243 individuals from 68 different countries. Participants responded to an online survey that included questions about relationship aspects (e.g., shared time, housework division), special circumstances (e.g., exit restrictions), and enduring dispositions (e.g., insecure attachment). A decline in time shared with one’s partner was the strongest predictor of decreases in relationship satisfaction, resulting in a different pattern of findings for cohabiting and non-cohabiting individuals. Among the most influential moderators were lockdown policies and insecure attachment. Differential involvement of men and women in household duties remained largely unchanged. The findings offer insights into aggravating and/or protecting factors in couples’ responses to pandemic-related stressors.


2021 ◽  
Vol 251 ◽  
pp. 02022
Author(s):  
Shih-Feng Chang ◽  
Wei-Zheng Zhang ◽  
Wan-Yin Liang ◽  
Jia-Yue Qiu ◽  
Sui Pan ◽  
...  

Under the thinking of “sharing economy”, Wish Magic wants to create a platform called “shared time bank”, so that users of the platform can store their free time in the “shared time bank” platform in advance. Then, according to the precise docking of products and services as well as supply and demand, Wish Magic also carries out the “wishing tree hole” platform to effectively interact with users according to the latest news and wish list released by users, and regularly goes to poor areas to carry out relevant poverty alleviation activities, so as to provide education support for local people with educational needs and truly play the role of targeted poverty alleviation. In addition, in today’s situation of prevailing pressure, Wish Magic will also create a “spitting tree hole” platform to provide a space for everyone to spit and vent their negative energy, and provide advice for everyone in work, study, love or marriage and other aspects, and help to solve practical problems. The combination of these three platforms enable people to arrange their time reasonably, make effective use of resources, and help people improve their work efficiency and quality of life, so as to create greater economic and social benefits.


Author(s):  
Robert E. Emery

AbstractThis overview discusses key findings, questions, and controversies about joint physical custody (JPC) emphasizing psychological issues for research and practice. Children living in JPC are slightly better adjusted, on average, but it is not clear whether this is a consequence of the arrangement or due to nonrandom selection into it. Moreover, no consistent evidence links specific variations in JPC to better or worse child adjustment, including equal or some other pattern of shared time. Parental conflict/cooperation is the factor most firmly, if still somewhat tenuously, established as a moderator of JPC effects. Other important moderators include logistics (e.g., geographical distance between parents), developmental stage (very young children and older adolescents may fare less well), and personality (a factor only beginning to be explored). The clearest implication for policy and practice is that children will fare better if their parents cooperate in crafting a parenting plan designed to meet their individual needs.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bin Sun ◽  
Kai Xie ◽  
Yan Liu ◽  
Yujin Zhang ◽  
Shaoshuai Guo ◽  
...  

In this paper, we reveal the dynamic effects of time-varying plasma on low-frequency (LF) electromagnetic (EM) wave propagation. The time-varying attenuation, time-varying phase shift, and power spectrum of the LF EM waves are presented. By using the frequency division multiplexing method, LF EM waves at the four discrete frequencies simultaneously penetrate through a shared time-varying plasma in one shock tube experiment. The experimental results indicate that the time-varying attenuation and phase shift of the LF EM wave are determined by the time-varying behavior of the plasma, and they are positively related to the electron density and frequency of the LF EM waves. The theoretical results are well consistent with the experimental results. Moreover, in the frequency domain, the time-varying plasma causes spectrum expansion of the LF EM waves. These results help us deeply understand the propagation process of LF EM waves in time-varying plasma and design LF communication systems.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bin Sun ◽  
Kai Xie ◽  
Yan Liu ◽  
Yujin Zhang ◽  
Shaoshuai Guo ◽  
...  

In this paper, we reveal the dynamic effects of time-varying plasma on low-frequency (LF) electromagnetic (EM) wave propagation. The time-varying attenuation, time-varying phase shift, and power spectrum of the LF EM waves are presented. By using the frequency division multiplexing method, LF EM waves at the four discrete frequencies simultaneously penetrate through a shared time-varying plasma in one shock tube experiment. The experimental results indicate that the time-varying attenuation and phase shift of the LF EM wave are determined by the time-varying behavior of the plasma, and they are positively related to the electron density and frequency of the LF EM waves. The theoretical results are well consistent with the experimental results. Moreover, in the frequency domain, the time-varying plasma causes spectrum expansion of the LF EM waves. These results help us deeply understand the propagation process of LF EM waves in time-varying plasma and design LF communication systems.


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