Positive Emotional Response | UX Design

When we select an object for practical reasons, such as opening a tin, reaching for a high shelf, or painting a wall, we use objective reasoning based on the physical or perceptible properties of the objects we have available to us.
When we interact with things in our environment, generally, we experience some form of emotional response, which is influenced by the object itself and the human qualities mentioned above. These emotional responses then lead to the development of relationships between humans and things. On the occasions where we are selecting things from our environment based on objective decision making, we typically form functional relationships, with little sense of attachment.
Positive attachments between humans and things are not necessarily formed instantaneously. We might develop a positive attachment over time, through continual use, a change in one or more of the aforementioned factors, or changes in our personal circumstances.

The contact list and call log are different applications that could not be accessed from one another.
Problem :
Combining contact list and call list generate the positive physic for the user, as the action of calling someone becomes so effortless.
When I look at Old Nokia phones, and contact list and call list being in two different folders, would have been time-consuming, also frustrating when they wanted to call some one and they have to go and find it in the contact list or call list not having to search button and they used to scroll through.

favorites, call log, contact list and voicemail are all tabs within the same application. A search function is also integrated with the app.
Solution:
when is the current system, having contact list and call list being in the same place, makes it easier. you can simply message the other person, also video call from the same place. It will subconsciously motivate you to stay connected with your loved ones as well as get things done faster.
Take Away
To one person a snow globe might be a tacky, mass-produced piece of plastic, but to a little boy or girl who bought one with money he/she saved from washing cars, it is personally meaningful and bound with various emotions. Such an attachment is the result of the factors touched on above converging, and, for us as humans, it is these significant emotional attachments (aside from our interpersonal attachments) that shape our specific experience of the world.