17 results on '"DeHart T"'
Search Results
2. Do Unto Others as Others Have Done Unto You?: Perceiving Sexism Influences Women's Evaluations of Stigmatized Racial Groups.
- Author
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Craig MA, Dehart T, Richeson JA, and Fiedorowicz L
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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3. Monster handguns
- Author
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DeHart, T. Keith
- Subjects
Firearms ,Business ,Sport, sporting goods and toys industry - Abstract
In the past year I have fired over 2,800 rounds of high-intensity loads through my Freedom Arms .454 Casull revolver. The 300-grain jacketed, 310-grain cast, and 335-grain cast bullets penetrate [...]
- Published
- 1990
4. High efficiency 3-J mercury bromide discharge laser.
- Author
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Znotins, T. A., Fisher, C. H., DeHart, T. E., McDaniel, J. P., and Ewing, J. J.
- Subjects
LASERS ,MERCURY compounds - Abstract
Operation of a large volume x-ray preionized avalanche discharge mercury bromide laser is reported. Output energies in excess of 3 J have been obtained; the best efficiency is 2.1% at an output energy of 2.2 J. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
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5. Scaling studies of X-ray preionized electric-discharge HgBr lasers.
- Author
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Fisher, C., Campbell, J., DeHart, T., Pindroh, A., and Ewing, J.
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- 1981
- Full Text
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6. COVID-19 in college: Risk perception and planned protective behavior.
- Author
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Hamilton HR, Peterson JL, and DeHart T
- Subjects
- Humans, Universities, Female, Male, Young Adult, Surveys and Questionnaires, SARS-CoV-2, Intention, Health Behavior, Adult, Adolescent, United States, Risk Assessment methods, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, COVID-19 Vaccines administration & dosage, COVID-19 prevention & control, COVID-19 psychology, COVID-19 epidemiology, Students psychology, Students statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objective: The Theory of Planned Behavior has been applied to COVID-19 protective behaviors, but evidence suggests this theory may be less predictive over time and less valid in individualistic societies. The current study applied this theory among American college students as vaccines became available and added perceived risk. Participants: 242 undergraduate students at two universities. Methods: Participants completed an online survey and analyses were conducted using PROCESS. Results: Perceived risk was indirectly related to protective behavior via intentions which were significantly impacted by positive attitudes, descriptive norms, and perceived behavioral control. Conclusions: Even within an individualistic culture and when vaccines were becoming available, the Theory of Planned Behavior predicts protective behaviors. Including risk perception also furthers understanding of this theory by identifying one factor related to norms and perceived behavioral control. These results may inform the design of interventions designed to increase compliance with pandemic-related policies and other positive behaviors.
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- 2024
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7. The Relational Wear and Tear of Everyday Racism Among African American Couples.
- Author
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Ong AD, Urganci B, Burrow AL, and DeHart T
- Subjects
- Adult, Black or African American psychology, Female, Heterosexuality, Humans, Male, Neuroticism, Racism psychology
- Abstract
The wear and tear of adapting to chronic stressors such as racism and discrimination can have detrimental effects on mental and physical health. Here, we investigated the wider implications of everyday racism for relationship quality in an adult sample of 98 heterosexual African American couples. Participants reported on their experiences of racial discrimination and positive and negative affect for 21 consecutive evenings. Using dyadic analyses, we found that independently of age, gender, marital status, income, racial-discrimination frequency, neuroticism, and mean levels of affect, participants' relationship quality was inversely associated with their partner's negative affective reactivity to racial discrimination. Associations did not vary by gender, suggesting that the effects of affective reactivity were similar for men and women. These findings highlight the importance of a dyadic approach and call for further research examining the role of everyday racism as a key source of stress in the lives of African American couples.
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- 2022
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8. Identity Selection and the Social Construction of Birthdays.
- Author
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Pelham BW, DeHart T, Shimizu M, Hardin CD, Han HA, and von Hippel W
- Abstract
We argue that rather than being a wholly random event, birthdays are sometimes selected by parents. We further argue that such effects have changed over time and are the result of important psychological processes. Long ago, U.S. American parents greatly overclaimed holidays as their children's birthdays. These effects were larger for more important holidays, and they grew smaller as births moved to hospitals and became officially documented. These effects were exaggerated for ethnic groups that deeply valued specific holidays. Parents also overclaimed well-liked calendar days and avoided disliked calendar days as their children's birthdays. However, after birthday selection effects virtually disappeared in the 1950s and 1960s, they reappeared after the emergence of labor induction and planned cesarean birth. For example, there are many fewer modern U.S. births than would be expected on Christmas Day. In addition, modern parents appear to use birth medicalization to avoid undesirable birthdays (Friday the 13th). We argue that basking in reflect glory, ethnic identity processes, and superstitions such as magical thinking all play a role in birthday selection effects. Discussion focuses on the power of social identity in day-to-day judgment and decision-making., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2021 Pelham, DeHart, Shimizu, Hardin, Han and Hippel.)
- Published
- 2021
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9. Cheers to Equality! Both Hostile and Benevolent Sexism Predict Increases in College Women's Alcohol Consumption.
- Author
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Hamilton HR and DeHart T
- Abstract
Based on research suggesting that alcohol consumption can be used as a means of coping with negative affect (Cooper, Frone, Russell, & Mudar, 1995), the current study examines sexism as a factor in college women's alcohol consumption. Despite being more prevalent than hostile sexism, benevolent sexism is often viewed as less sexist (Oswald, Baalbaki, & Kirkman, 2018) and having a less aversive impact on women (Bosson, Pinel, & Vandello, 2010). To increase understanding of the negative effects of both hostile and benevolent sexism, the current study experimentally manipulated sexism during a lab session and measured 176 U.S. college women's actual alcohol consumption that evening. As predicted, college women who experienced either the hostile or the benevolent sexism condition reported consuming a greater number of alcoholic drinks, and those in the hostile sexism condition were more likely to meet the binge drinking threshold than participants in the control condition. This pattern suggests the importance of examining the unique effects of benevolent sexism in addition to hostile sexism because both may influence women's behavior even in important health domains. Given the many negative consequences associated with alcohol consumption, our results provide evidence for education on healthy coping mechanisms and interventions to reduce both hostile and benevolent sexism.
- Published
- 2020
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10. Does Stress Explain the Effect of Sleep on Self-Control Difficulties? A Month-Long Daily Diary Study.
- Author
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Hisler GC, Krizan Z, and DeHart T
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Female, Humans, Male, Medical Records, Neuroticism, Psychological Tests, Sleep Deprivation complications, Sleep Deprivation etiology, Sleep Deprivation psychology, Stress, Psychological psychology, Self-Control psychology, Sleep, Stress, Psychological complications
- Abstract
Insufficient sleep is linked to increased stress and suboptimal self-control; however, no studies have examined stress as a reason for why sleep affects self-control. Moreover, it is unknown if there are individual differences that make people vulnerable to this dynamic. Daily diary entries from 212 university students across 30 days were used in a multilevel path model examining if stress explained how prior night sleep affected next-day self-control difficulties and exploring if individual differences in sleep duration, stress, or self-control qualified this effect. Increased stress partially mediated of the effect of reduced sleep duration on increased next-day self-control difficulty. Moreover, short sleep increased next-day stress more for individuals with higher typical stress. Daytime stress especially amplified self-control difficulty for individuals with shorter typical sleep duration. Findings implicate stress as a substantial factor in how sleep loss undermines self-control and identify individuals particularly susceptible to this effect.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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11. Needs and Norms: Testing the Effects of Negative Interpersonal Interactions, the Need to Belong, and Perceived Norms on Alcohol Consumption.
- Author
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Hamilton HR and DeHart T
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Female, Humans, Male, Peer Group, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult, Alcohol Drinking psychology, Interpersonal Relations, Social Norms, Students psychology, Universities
- Abstract
Objective: The current study examined whether individual differences in the need to belong and perceived drinking norms (both injunctive and descriptive) moderate the effects of daily negative interpersonal interactions on college students' evening alcohol consumption., Method: A total of 212 (123 female) college students completed a background survey measuring their need to belong and perceptions of injunctive and descriptive drinking norms. They then completed a 30-day daily-diary study in which they reported on their daily interpersonal experiences and alcohol consumption., Results: Multilevel modeling analyses revealed that, among students higher in the need to belong, daily negative interpersonal interactions during the day were associated with drinking behavior that evening that was more in line with perceived injunctive norms (i.e., perceptions of how much peers approve of drinking) when perceived descriptive norms were controlled for. This was not found for students lower in the need to belong. In contrast, descriptive norms (i.e., perceptions of how much peers drink) did not moderate the effects of daily negative interpersonal interactions on evening alcohol consumption when injunctive norms were controlled for., Conclusions: We suggest that unmet belongingness needs motivate students to regulate drinking behavior to be in accordance with what they perceive as most approved of by their peers. That is, students may not drink solely to reduce negative affect but to fit in and gain approval.
- Published
- 2019
12. Trust between patients and health websites: a review of the literature and derived outcomes from empirical studies.
- Author
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Vega LC, Montague E, and Dehart T
- Abstract
With the exploding growth of the web, health websites have become a dominant force in the realm of health care. Technically savvy patients have been using the web not only to self inform but to self diagnose. In this paper we examine the trust relationship between humans and health websites by outlining the existing literature on trust in health websites. A total of forty-nine papers were examined using a meta-analytical framework. Using this framework, each paper was coded for the antecedents and facets that comprise user trust in health websites. Our findings show that there is little consensus regarding the defining characteristics of the construct of trust in health websites. Further research in this field should focus on collaboratively defining trust and what factors affect trust in health web sites.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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13. Personality Moderates the Interaction between Positive and Negative Daily Events Predicting Negative Affect and Stress.
- Author
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Longua J, Dehart T, Tennen H, and Armeli S
- Abstract
A 30-day diary study examined personality moderators (neuroticism and extraversion) of the interaction between positive and negative daily events predicting daily negative affect and night-time stress. Multilevel analyses revealed positive daily events buffered the effect of negative daily events on negative affect for individuals low in neuroticism and individuals high in extraversion, but not for individuals high in neuroticism or individuals low in extraversion. Positive daily events also buffered the effect of negative daily events on that night's stress, but only for participants low in neuroticism. As such, this research linked today's events to tonight's stressfulness. This study advances our understanding of how neuroticism and extraversion influence within-person associations between positive and negative events predicting negative affect and stress.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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14. A Diary Study of Implicit Self-esteem, Interpersonal Interactions and Alcohol Consumption in College Students.
- Author
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Dehart T, Tennen H, Armeli S, Todd M, and Mohr C
- Abstract
A 30-day daily diary study examined the relations among implicit self-esteem, interpersonal interactions, and alcohol consumption in college students. Multilevel analyses revealed that students with low implicit self-esteem drank more on days when they experienced more negative interpersonal interactions. In contrast, students with high implicit self-esteem drank more on days when they experienced more positive interpersonal interactions. Spending time with people who were drinking mediated both the low implicit self-esteem by negative interpersonal events interaction and the high implicit self-esteem by positive interpersonal events interaction. These findings suggest that people with low implicit self-esteem may unintentionally drink as a way to regulate unfulfilled needs for acceptance. On the other hand, people with high implicit self-esteem may drink as a way to enhance positive interpersonal experiences.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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15. Supercompensated glycogen loads persist 5 days in resting trained cyclists.
- Author
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Arnall DA, Nelson AG, Quigley J, Lex S, Dehart T, and Fortune P
- Subjects
- Adaptation, Physiological, Adult, Analysis of Variance, Diet, Fat-Restricted, Diet, Protein-Restricted, Dietary Carbohydrates administration & dosage, Eating, Heart Rate, Humans, Male, Regression Analysis, Time Factors, Bicycling, Dietary Carbohydrates metabolism, Glycogen metabolism, Muscle Fatigue physiology, Muscle, Skeletal metabolism, Rest physiology
- Abstract
Research data indicates a persistence of elevated muscle glycogen concentration 3 days post-supercompensation in resting athletes. This study expands our earlier findings by determining whether muscle glycogen remains elevated 3, 5, or 7 days post-supercompensation. Seventeen trained male cyclists underwent one bout of exhaustive exercise to deplete muscle glycogen. This was followed by a 3-day consumption of a high carbohydrate/low protein/low fat diet (85:08:07%). Three post-loading phases followed with subjects randomly assigned to either a 3-day, 5-day, or 7-day post-loading maintenance diet of 60% carbohydrate and limited physical activity. Biopsies (50-150 mg) of the vastus lateralis were obtained pre-load (BASELINE), at peak-load (PEAK), and either at 3-day, 5-day, or 7-day post-load (POST). On average, PEAK to POST muscle glycogen concentrations decreased 34, 20 and 46% respectively for the 3-, 5-, and 7-day POST groups. Only the 7-day post-load group's PEAK to POST mean muscle glycogen concentration decreased significantly. In addition, multi-regression analysis indicated that the PEAK glycogen level was the main determinant of the number of days that glycogen levels remained significantly greater than BASELINE. Thus, trained athletes' supercompensated glycogen levels can remain higher than normal for up to 5 days post-loading. The amount of carbohydrate consumed, the level of physical activity, and the magnitude of the glycogen supercompensation determine the interval for which the glycogen levels are elevated.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Assessing the validity of implicit egotism: a reply to Gallucci (2003).
- Author
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Pelham BW, Carvallo M, DeHart T, and Jones JT
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Individuality, Likelihood Functions, Male, Probability, Reproducibility of Results, Sample Size, United States, Career Choice, Choice Behavior, Defense Mechanisms, Names, Residence Characteristics
- Abstract
B. W. Pelham, M. C. Mirenberg, and J. T. Jones (2002) argued that most people prefer stimuli that are associated with the self, a preference they called implicit egotism. In support of implicit egotism, Pelham et al presented evidence from 10 archival studies showing that people gravitate toward careers and places of residence that resemble their names or birthday numbers. M. Gallucci (2003) argued that alternate analyses of the same data provide strong evidence against implicit egotism. Whereas Gallucci was correct that Pelham et al's original analyses were flawed, their results remain significant even when more conservative tests are used. The authors also present new data in support of implicit egotism, including exhaustive studies of (a) common surnames and US city names and (b) common surnames and street names. The new studies also revealed that as sample sizes grow larger, studies are more likely to produce evidence of implicit egotism.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Retrieving positive memories to regulate negative mood: consequences for mood-congruent memory.
- Author
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Rusting CL and DeHart T
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Individuality, Male, Models, Psychological, Negativism, Affect, Memory, Personality, Self Efficacy
- Abstract
Several researchers have suggested that mood-incongruency effects are due to a mood-regulatory process in which people retrieve positive memories to repair negative moods. The present studies tested this idea by manipulating mood-repair strategies and examining their impact on positive and negative memory retrieval. Mood-congruent retrieval occurred when participants stayed focused on events associated with their negative mood; mood-incongruent retrieval occurred when participants engaged in positive reappraisal (when they reinterpreted events as having positive outcomes). The effects of these strategies on memory retrieval also interacted with personality traits related to negative mood regulation. Individuals high in such traits showed stronger mood-incongruent memory than did individuals low in negative mood-regulation traits. Discussion focuses on integrating mood-regulatory variables and personality variables into existing mood-congruency theories (e.g., associative network models).
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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