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35 results on '"Jenny M. Cundiff"'

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1. Educational quality may be a closer correlate of cardiometabolic health than educational attainment

2. Early Adversities and Negative Affect in Young Adulthood: Does Family Income Matter?

3. Expectations of respect and appreciation in daily life and associations with subclinical cardiovascular disease

4. Risky Early Family Environment and Genetic Associations with Adult Metabolic Dysregulation

5. An Examination of Sleep as a Mediator of the Relationship between Childhood Adversity and Depression in Hispanic and Non-Hispanic Young Adults

6. Is educational quality, not just educational attainment, associated with cardiometabolic health: A test in two samples

7. Relations between cannabis use, socioeconomic status, and risk perceptions in a Hispanic/Latinx population

8. Early Adversity and Changes in Cortisol and Negative Affect in Response to Interpersonal Threats in the Laboratory

10. Childhood socioeconomic status and inflammation: Psychological moderators among Black and White Americans

11. The Pathway From Social Status to Physical Health: Taking a Closer Look at Stress as a Mediator

12. Prospective Associations of Parenting and Childhood Maltreatment with Personality in Adolescent Males

13. Social Stratification and Risk for Cardiovascular Disease: Examination of Emotional Suppression as a Pathway to Risk

14. Racial differences in sleep duration intersect with sex, socioeconomic status, and U.S. geographic region: The REGARDS study

15. Cumulative childhood adversity and adult cardiometabolic disease: A meta-analysis

16. Is subjective social status a unique correlate of physical health? A meta-analysis

17. Socioeconomic status and parenting during adolescence in relation to ideal cardiovascular health in Black and White men

18. Daily Interpersonal Experience Partially Explains the Association Between Social Rank and Physical Health

19. Hierarchy and health: Physiological effects of interpersonal experiences associated with socioeconomic position

20. Marital Quality Buffers the Association Between Socioeconomic Status and Ambulatory Blood Pressure

21. Friends With Health Benefits: The Long-Term Benefits of Early Peer Social Integration for Blood Pressure and Obesity in Midlife

22. Pathways Linking Childhood SES and Adult Health Behaviors and Psychological Resources in Black and White Men

23. Socioeconomic Status and Cardiovascular Responses to Standardized Stressors: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

24. Poor Sleep Moderates the Relationship Between Daytime Napping and Inflammation in Black and White Men

25. Moving up matters: Socioeconomic mobility prospectively predicts better physical health

26. Optimism and Pessimism in Social Context: An Interpersonal Perspective on Resilience and Risk

27. Socioeconomic status and health: education and income are independent and joint predictors of ambulatory blood pressure

28. Daily social interactions, close relationships, and systemic inflammation in two samples: Healthy middle-aged and older adults

29. Subjective Social Status: Construct Validity and Associations with Psychosocial Vulnerability and Self-Rated Health

30. An Interpersonal Analysis of Subjective Social Status and Psychosocial Risk

31. Affiliation and control in marital interaction: interpersonal complementarity is present but is not associated with affect or relationship quality

32. Social status, everyday interpersonal processes, and coronary heart disease: A social psychophysiological view

33. An Interpersonal Perspective on Risk for Coronary Heart Disease

35. Incremental Validity of Spouse Ratings versus Self-Reports of Personality as Predictors of Marital Quality and Behavior during Marital Conflict

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