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result(s) for
"Mate selection Computer network resources."
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Love online : emotions on the Internet
by
Ben-Ze®ev, Aaron
in
Love Computer network resources.
,
Man-woman relationships Computer network resources.
,
Mate selection Computer network resources.
2011
This book will change the way you look at cyberspace and love forever. Computers are changing not just the way we work. Falling in & out of love, flirting, cheating, even having sex online have all become part of the modern way of living & loving.
Love Online
by
Ben-Ze'ev, Aaron
in
Computer network resources
,
Computer sex
,
Dating (Social customs) -- Computer network resources
2004,2009
Computers have changed not just the way we work but the way we love. Falling in and out of love, flirting, cheating, even having sex online have all become part of the modern way of living and loving. Yet we know very little about these new types of relationship. How is an online affair where the two people involved may never see or meet each other different from an affair in the real world? Is online sex still cheating on your partner? Why do people tell complete strangers their most intimate secrets? What are the rules of engagement? Will online affairs change the monogamous nature of romantic relationships? These are just some of the questions Professor Aaron Ben Ze'ev, distinguished writer and academic, addresses in this 2004 book, a full-length study of love online. Accessible, shocking, entertaining, enlightening, this book will change the way you look at cyberspace and love forever.
Sexual Mixing in Shanghai: Are Heterosexual Contact Patterns Compatible With an HIV/AIDS Epidemic?
by
Gauthier, Robin
,
Moody, James
,
Merli, M. Giovanna
in
Acquired immune deficiency syndrome
,
Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome - epidemiology
,
Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome - transmission
2015
China's HIV prevalence is low, mainly concentrated among female sex workers (FSWs), their clients, men who have sex with men, and the stable partners of members of these high-risk groups. We evaluate the contribution to the spread of HIV of China's regime of heterosexual relations, of the structure of heterosexual networks, and of the attributes of key population groups with simulations driven by data from a crosssectional survey of egocentric sexual networks of the general population of Shanghai and from a concurrent respondent-driven sample of FSWs. We find that the heterosexual network generated by our empirically calibrated simulations has low levels of partner change, strong constraints on partner selection by age and education, and a very small connected core, mainly comprising FSWs and their clients and characterized by a fragile transmission structure. This network has a small HIV epidemic potential but is compatible with the transmission of bacterial sexually transmitted infections (STIs), such as syphilis, which are less susceptible to structural breaks in transmission of infection. Our results suggest that policies that force commercial sex underground could have an adverse effect on the spread of HIV and other STIs.
Journal Article