The Effects of Perceived Discrimination on Ambulatory Blood Pressure and Affective Responses to Interpersonal Stress Modeled Over 24 Hours.
Publication
, Journal Article
Richman, LS; Pek, J; Pascoe, E; Bauer, D
Published in: Health Psychology
2010
Duke Scholars
Published In
Health Psychology
Publication Date
2010
Volume
29
Issue
403-411
Related Subject Headings
- Public Health
- 52 Psychology
- 42 Health sciences
- 17 Psychology and Cognitive Sciences
- 13 Education
- 11 Medical and Health Sciences
Citation
APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Richman, L. S., Pek, J., Pascoe, E., & Bauer, D. (2010). The Effects of Perceived Discrimination on Ambulatory Blood Pressure and Affective Responses to Interpersonal Stress Modeled Over 24 Hours. Health Psychology, 29(403–411).
Richman, L. S., J. Pek, E. Pascoe, and D. Bauer. “The Effects of Perceived Discrimination on Ambulatory Blood Pressure and Affective Responses to Interpersonal Stress Modeled Over 24 Hours.” Health Psychology 29, no. 403–411 (2010).
Richman LS, Pek J, Pascoe E, Bauer D. The Effects of Perceived Discrimination on Ambulatory Blood Pressure and Affective Responses to Interpersonal Stress Modeled Over 24 Hours. Health Psychology. 2010;29(403–411).
Richman, L. S., et al. “The Effects of Perceived Discrimination on Ambulatory Blood Pressure and Affective Responses to Interpersonal Stress Modeled Over 24 Hours.” Health Psychology, vol. 29, no. 403–411, 2010.
Richman LS, Pek J, Pascoe E, Bauer D. The Effects of Perceived Discrimination on Ambulatory Blood Pressure and Affective Responses to Interpersonal Stress Modeled Over 24 Hours. Health Psychology. 2010;29(403–411).
Published In
Health Psychology
Publication Date
2010
Volume
29
Issue
403-411
Related Subject Headings
- Public Health
- 52 Psychology
- 42 Health sciences
- 17 Psychology and Cognitive Sciences
- 13 Education
- 11 Medical and Health Sciences