P
Peter E.D. Love
Researcher at Curtin University
Publications - 557
Citations - 29067
Peter E.D. Love is an academic researcher from Curtin University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Procurement & Rework. The author has an hindex of 90, co-authored 546 publications receiving 24815 citations. Previous affiliations of Peter E.D. Love include Kyung Hee University & Deakin University.
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Coping and psychological adjustment among information technology personnel
Peter E.D. Love,Zahir Irani +1 more
TL;DR: This paper investigates whether coping and affect (both negative and positive) influence adjustment (anxiety, depression and stress) among IT personnel.
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Quantitative and qualitative approaches to information systems evaluation
TL;DR: The adoption of information technology (IT) and IS offer many organisations the opportunity to reap a wide variety of strategic, tactical and operational benefits, however it is the intangible and non-financial benefits, together with the indirect project costs that often complicate the justification process.
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Rework in highway projects
TL;DR: A case study of a Spanish highway project, which experienced a significant cost overrun as a result of rework, is examined and the causal factors that contributed to its occurrence are determined through observation and subsequent analysis of interviews and documentation as mentioned in this paper.
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Evaluation of public–private partnerships: A life-cycle Performance Prism for ensuring value for money
TL;DR: Public-private partnerships have become an integral strategy to deliver infrastructure projects in Australia and yet, public-private partnership have been plagued with controversy due to recurrent issues of recurrent conflicts as mentioned in this paper.
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Documentation errors in instrumentation and electrical systems: Toward productivity improvement using System Information Modeling
TL;DR: The research reveals that Computer Aided Design used to produce the electrical drawings was ineffective, inefficient and costly to produce as they contained an array of errors and it is estimated that a 94% cost saving and a substantial improvement in productivity could have been attained in this particular case.