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Subject Areas on Research
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Advancing Psychologically Informed Practice for Patients With Persistent Musculoskeletal Pain: Promise, Pitfalls, and Solutions.
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An archival prospective study of mental health and longevity.
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An empirical explanation of the flash-lag effect.
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Anger and persistent pain: current status and future directions.
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Behavioral and psychosocial predictors of physical performance: MacArthur studies of successful aging.
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Biobehavioral research on cardiovascular disorders.
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Borderline personality disorder and emotional responding: a review of the research literature.
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Consciousness and the natural method.
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Contribution of job strain, job status and marital status to laboratory and ambulatory blood pressure in patients with mild hypertension.
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Could spirituality and religion promote stress resilience in survivors of childhood trauma?
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Effects of age, hypertension history, and neuroticism on health perceptions.
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Emotion processing in the aging brain is modulated by semantic elaboration.
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Evaluation of beta-adrenergic influences on cardiovascular and metabolic adjustments to physical and psychological stress.
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Evolution of neocortex.
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Hemodynamics of blood pressure responses during active and passive coping.
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Laboratory reactivity assessment: effects of casual blood pressure status and choice of task difficulty.
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Late luteal phase dysphoric disorder.
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Measurement reliability of cardiovascular reactivity change scores: a comparison of intermittent and continuous methods of assessment.
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Medial prefrontal pathways for the contextual regulation of extinguished fear in humans.
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Multivariate pattern classification reveals autonomic and experiential representations of discrete emotions.
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Navigating diagnoses: understanding mind-body relations, mental health, and stigma in Nepal.
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Neuroendocrine, cardiovascular, and emotional responses of hostile men: the role of interpersonal challenge.
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Operant conditioning: a new theoretical approach in psychosomatic medicine.
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Patterns and stability of cardiovascular responses to variations of the cold pressor test.
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Perceiving the intensity of light.
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Psychological aspects of hypertension. II. The differential influence of interview variables on blood pressure.
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Psychological perspectives on death.
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Psychologically informed interventions for low back pain: an update for physical therapists.
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Psychophysiological mediators of caregiver stress and differential cognitive decline.
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Psychosocial influences on blood pressure during daily life.
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Psychosocial influences on low back pain: why should you care?
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Puberty onset of gender differences in rates of depression: a developmental, epidemiologic and neuroendocrine perspective.
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Relation of cardiovascular responses to mental stress and cardiac vagal activity in coronary artery disease.
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Sensory coding.
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Social blushing.
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Stress reactivity and exercise training in premenopausal and postmenopausal women.
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The assessment of pain behavior: implications for applied psychophysiology and future research directions.
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The measurement of human penile tumescence.
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The multi-dimensional nature of active coping: differential effects of effort and enhanced control on cardiovascular reactivity.
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Using computational auditory models to predict simultaneous masking data: model comparison.
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Watching my mind unfold versus yours: an fMRI study using a novel camera technology to examine neural differences in self-projection of self versus other perspectives.
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What you see may not be what you get: a brief, nontechnical introduction to overfitting in regression-type models.
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Keywords of People
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Cabeza, Roberto,
Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience,
Duke Science & Society
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Huettel, Lisa Gresham,
Professor of the Practice in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering,
Electrical and Computer Engineering
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LaBar, Kevin S.,
Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience,
Duke Science & Society
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O'Connor, Christopher Michael,
Richard Sean Stack, M.D. Distinguished Professor,
Medicine, Clinical Pharmacology
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Oliver, Jason A,
Assistant Professor in Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences,
Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Addiction