57 results on '"Pauly, Theresa"'
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2. SOLITUDE LINKS WITH INDIVIDUAL AND RELATIONAL WELL-BEING: EVIDENCE FROM DYADIC DAILY LIFE ASSESSMENTS
3. EVERYDAY SOLITUDE, TIME SAVORING, WELL-BEING, AND HEALTH IN OLDER ADULTHOOD
4. ASSOCIATIONS BETWEEN SENSE OF PURPOSE, NEGATIVE AFFECT, AND CORTISOL: EVIDENCE FROM REPEATED DAILY ASSESSMENTS
5. Long-term aging trajectories of the accumulation of disease burden as predictors of daily affect dynamics and stressor reactivity.
6. Everyday Pain in Middle and Later Life: Associations with Daily and Momentary Present-Moment Awareness as One Key Facet of Mindfulness
7. Social Prescribing Outcomes for Trials (SPOT): Protocol for a modified Delphi study on core outcomes
8. Time-varying associations between loneliness and physical activity: Evidence from repeated daily life assessments in an adult lifespan sample
9. Let’s Enjoy an Evening on the Couch? A Daily Life Investigation of Shared Problematic Behaviors in Three Couple Studies
10. Daily Affect and Daily Prospective Memory in People after Stroke and Their Partners: The Moderating Role of Resting Heart Rate
11. Momentary subjective age is associated with perceived and physiological stress in the daily lives of old and very old adults.
12. PHYSICAL INTIMACY IN DAILY LIVES OF OLDER ROMANTIC COUPLES: LINKS WITH MOMENTARY AFFECT AND DAILY CORTISOL LEVELS
13. FUTURE TIME PERSPECTIVE MODULATES AFFECTIVE REACTIVITY TO SOCIAL PROBLEMS DURING THE PANDEMIC
14. TIME-VARYING ASSOCIATIONS BETWEEN SOCIAL INTERACTION MODALITY AND POSITIVE AFFECT DURING TIMES OF CHALLENGE
15. INSIGHTS INTO HEALTH-RELEVANT INTERPERSONAL DYNAMICS IN AGING COUPLES FROM THE LAB AND DAILY LIFE
16. Time-Varying Daily Gratitude-Affect Links Across the Adult Lifespan
17. "WHAT'S YOURS IS MINE": A DYADIC STUDY OF EVERYDAY EMOTIONAL EXPERIENCES AND CORTISOL IN OLDER COUPLES
18. A lifespan psychological perspective on solitude
19. Having time to oneself in times of extended togetherness: Solitude experiences during the COVID‐19 pandemic
20. Alternating time spent on social interactions and solitude in healthy older adults
21. The differential roles of chronic and transient loneliness in daily prosocial behavior.
22. Dynamic associations between stress and relationship functioning in the wake of COVID-19: Longitudinal data from the German family panel (pairfam)
23. Physical Intimacy in Older Couples’ Everyday Lives: Its Frequency and Links With Affect and Salivary Cortisol
24. Having a Good Time Together: The Role of Companionship in Older Couples’ Everyday Life
25. Health Behaviors in Times of COVID: Different Sources of Support for Older Adults
26. The Role of Relationship Quality for Solitude Experiences during the Pandemic
27. A developmental–contextual model of couple synchrony across adulthood and old age.
28. Short-Term Fluctuation of Subjective Age and its Correlates: An Ecological Momentary Assessment of Older Adults
29. Discrete Affective States, Cortisol, and Self-Rated Health in Old Age
30. The Role of Relationship Quality for Solitude Experiences during the Pandemic
31. Hand Washing and Related Cognitions Following a Brief Behavior Change Intervention During the COVID-19 Pandemic: a Pre-Post Analysis
32. Corrigendum to: COVID-19, Time to Oneself, and Loneliness: Creativity as a Resource
33. Move more, move better: A narrative review of wearable technologies and their application to precision health.
34. Positive and negative affect are associated with salivary cortisol in the everyday life of older adults: A quantitative synthesis of four aging studies
35. Active With Whom? Examining the Social Context of Physical Activity in Individuals After Stroke and Their Partners
36. Daily Physical Activity in Older Age
37. Time-varying associations between everyday affect and cortisol in older couples.
38. COVID-19, Time to Oneself, and Loneliness: Creativity as a Resource
39. Joint Goals in Older Couples: Associations With Goal Progress, Allostatic Load, and Relationship Satisfaction
40. Social Isolation, Loneliness, and Solitude in Older Adulthood
41. Partner Contributions to Goal Pursuit: Findings From Repeated Daily Life Assessments With Older Couples
42. You’re under my skin: Long-term relationship and health correlates of cortisol synchrony in older couples.
43. Political context is associated with everyday cortisol synchrony in older couples
44. Political context is associated with extent of everyday physiological synchrony in older couples
45. Understanding the relationship between age and information-seeking in the context of COVID-19
46. Cortisol Synchrony in Older Couples: Daily Socioemotional Correlates and Interpersonal Differences
47. LINKS BETWEEN PARTNER INTERACTIONS, EMPATHY, AND EVERYDAY PHYSIOLOGICAL SYNCHRONY IN OLDER COUPLES
48. AGE, FUTURE TIME PERSPECTIVE, AND EVERYDAY PHYSICAL ACTIVITY AND NUTRITION IN COUPLES POST STROKE
49. Technology, Physical Activity, Loneliness, and Cognitive Functioning in Old Age
50. Everyday associations between older adults’ physical activity, negative affect, and cortisol.
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