28 results on '"Levine CS"'
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2. Gentrification creates social class disparities in belonging.
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Song R and Levine CS
- Abstract
Gentrification impacts nearly every major city in the United States, posing a potential threat to lower social class residents' sense of belonging in their neighborhoods. In one survey and three preregistered experiments, we investigated how gentrification affects the belonging of residents across the social class spectrum and how to invest in working-class neighborhoods without undermining lower social class residents' sense of belonging. Studies 1-3 ( N s = 141, 1,085, and 510, respectively) provided correlational and experimental evidence that lower social class residents feel less belonging than higher social class residents in gentrifying neighborhoods. Study 3 showed that this belonging disparity was mediated by lower social class individuals perceiving themselves to be less similar to and less trusting of other residents and higher social class individuals feeling the amenities would better suit them in the gentrifying neighborhood. Nevertheless, neighborhood investment does not always threaten lower social class individuals' sense of belonging. Study 4 ( N = 402) showed that lower social class individuals anticipated greater belonging and were more supportive when neighborhood investment was community driven (i.e., prioritized the needs of existing residents) than capital driven (i.e., prioritized economic growth). We discuss implications for equitable urban policy and future directions for a social psychology of gentrification. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2024
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3. I Am Not A Virus: Status-Based Rejection Sensitivity and Sleep Among East Asian People in the United States During COVID-19.
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Dai JD and Levine CS
- Abstract
As COVID-19 spread in the United States, anti-East Asian bias increased. This article aimed to (1) show that thinking about COVID-19 heightened East Asian individuals' anxious expectations of discrimination and (2) explore these expectations' health correlates. Specifically, the paper focused on COVID-19-triggered race-based rejection sensitivity, defined as (1) East Asian individuals' expectations of rejection due to the stereotype that they spread the virus and (2) high levels of anxiety about this possibility. Study 1 ( N = 412) showed that reminders of COVID-19 increased COVID-19-triggered race-based rejection sensitivity among Chinese citizens living in the United States and East Asian Americans, but not Americans of other races. Study 2 ( N = 473) demonstrated that East Asian people who habitually focused on COVID-19 experienced greater COVID-19-triggered race-based rejection sensitivity and, in turn, greater sleep difficulties. Thus, societal-level shifts that target minoritized groups may increase minoritized group members' concerns about discrimination in ways that undermine their health., Competing Interests: The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article., (© The Author(s) 2022.)
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- 2023
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4. Guided Meditation (Hypnosis) and Whole Person Health.
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Levine RA, Levine CS, and Seidman MD
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- Humans, Hypnosis, Meditation
- Abstract
Whole person (holistic) health deals with the mind-body-spirit connection as a unified domain. Balancing the whole person's health makes it possible for cells, tissues, and fluids that are out of balance in disease to come back into balance as the person heals from illness. The Automatic Pattern Recognition and Interruption system can facilitate rapid change in people, once they are freed up from subconscious mind constraints. The goal of the modern, transformed health-care system should be to combine the best of conventional care and whole person health to produce the best health care on the planet., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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5. Feeling excited or taking a bath: Do distinct pathways underlie the positive affect-health link in the U.S. and Japan?
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Clobert M, Sims TL, Yoo J, Miyamoto Y, Markus HR, Karasawa M, and Levine CS
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- Asian People psychology, Female, Humans, Japan ethnology, Male, Middle Aged, Surveys and Questionnaires, United States ethnology, Affect, Arousal physiology, Baths psychology, Cultural Characteristics, Exercise psychology
- Abstract
Feeling good is linked to better health in Western contexts. Recent studies show, however, that the affect-health link is not consistent across cultures. We suggest two reasons for such inconsistency. The first follows from research showing that North American (vs. East Asian) cultures tend to value high arousal positive (HAP) states, for example, excited, more than low arousal positive (LAP) states, for example, calm. The second is one we propose for the first time. Positive affective experience is manifest in internal feelings but also in affective practices, such as taking a bath (a highly valued affective experience in Japan) or a fitness workout (a highly valued affective experience in the United States). We hypothesized that the HAP feelings/practices-health link would be stronger in the United States versus Japan, and the LAP feelings/practices-health link would be stronger in Japan versus the United States. Using survey samples from the United States (N = 640) and Japan (N = 382), we examined how health outcomes are shaped by positive affective feelings and practices varying in arousal. In a first set of analyses, HAP feelings predicted better physical and biological health in the United States but not in Japan. No cultural differences were consistently found for the effect of LAP feelings on health. In addition, engaging in HAP practices predicted better physical and biological health in the United States whereas engaging in LAP practices predicted better physical health in Japan but not in the United States. These findings suggest that the pathways underlying the culture-health link are culturally variable. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2020
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6. Academic disparities and health: How gender-based disparities in schools relate to boys' and girls' health.
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Levine CS, Miller GE, Shalowitz MU, Story RE, Manczak EM, Hayen R, Hoffer LC, Le V, Vause KJ, and Chen E
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- Adolescent, Chicago, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Academic Success, Health Status Disparities, Sex Factors, Students statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Rationale: Recent research reveals that, although girls encounter some barriers in school (e.g., in science and math), on balance, boys perform worse academically. Moreover, other research has identified a correlation between exposure to a context characterized by large disparities in performance or resources and a range of negative outcomes, including negative health and well-being, among members of lower status groups., Objective: Building on these literatures, the present research tests the relationship between gender disparities in academic performance within a school and students' health outcomes. Specifically, we investigated whether boys had worse health when they attended schools where there was a greater disparity between boys' and girls' academic performance., Method: We tested this hypothesis in two different samples with different health outcomes. In a sample of healthy eighth graders (Study 1; 159 girls and 81 boys), we assessed two indices of metabolic syndrome, and in a sample of children with asthma (Study 2; 122 girls and 153 boys), we assessed immune function (Th1 and Th2 cytokine production) and self-reported symptoms. Participants in both samples also reported the name of the school that they attended so that we could access publicly available information about the percentage of girls and the percentage of boys in each school who met expectations for their grade level on standardized tests., Results: In both samples, the greater the gap in a school between the percentage of girls and the percentage of boys who met expectations for their grade level on standardized tests, the worse boys' health. This pattern did not emerge among girls., Conclusion: Results thus highlight the negative health correlates of academic disparities among members of lower-performing groups., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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7. Aspects of the parent-child relationship and parent metabolic outcomes.
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Jones EJ, Chen E, Levine CS, Lam PH, Liu VY, and Schreier HMC
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- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Sex Factors, Surveys and Questionnaires, Blood Pressure physiology, Cholesterol blood, Fathers, Glycated Hemoglobin metabolism, Heart Rate physiology, Mothers, Parent-Child Relations
- Abstract
Much is known about the effect of parent-child relationships on child health; less is known about how parent-child relationships influence parent health. To assess the association between aspects of the parent-child relationship and parent metabolic outcomes, and whether these associations are moderated by parent gender. Five metabolic outcomes (systolic and diastolic blood pressure, heart rate, total cholesterol and glycated hemoglobin) were assessed among 261 parents (45.83 ± 5.50 years) of an adolescent child (14.57 ± 1.072 years). Parents completed questionnaires assessing their child's hassles and the quality of their days with their child. Parents' perceptions of their child's hassles were associated with parent heart rate (B = 2.954, SE = 1.267, p = 0.021) and cholesterol (B = 0.028, SE = 0.011, p = 0.010), such that greater perceived child hassles were associated with higher heart rate and cholesterol levels, on average. These associations were not moderated by parent gender (all ps > 0.30). Parent report of their day with their child was not associated with parent metabolic outcomes (all ps > 0.20). Parent gender moderated the association between parent report of their day with their child and parent systolic blood pressure (B = 13.861, SE = 6.200, p = 0.026), such that less positive reports were associated with higher blood pressure readings among fathers, but not mothers. This study suggests that parent metabolic health may in part be influenced by aspects of the parent-child relationship.
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- 2019
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8. Students of color show health advantages when they attend schools that emphasize the value of diversity.
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Levine CS, Markus HR, Austin MK, Chen E, and Miller GE
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- Adolescent, Biomarkers, Female, Health Status Disparities, Humans, Inflammation epidemiology, Male, Metabolic Syndrome epidemiology, Racism statistics & numerical data, Risk Factors, Schools standards, Schools statistics & numerical data, United States epidemiology, Cultural Diversity, Racial Groups statistics & numerical data, Schools organization & administration, Students statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
As the United States becomes more diverse, the ways in which mainstream institutions recognize and address race and ethnicity will be increasingly important. Here, we show that one novel and salient characteristic of an institutional environment, that is, whether a school emphasizes the value of racial and ethnic diversity, predicts better cardiometabolic health among adolescents of color. Using a diverse sample of adolescents who attend more than 100 different schools in predominantly urban locations, we find that when schools emphasize the value of diversity (operationalized as mentioning diversity in their mission statements), students of color, but not white students, have lower values on a composite of five biomarkers of inflammation, have less insulin resistance and compensatory β-cell activity, and have fewer metabolic syndrome signs and score lower on a continuous metabolic syndrome composite. These results suggest that institutions that emphasize diversity may play an unacknowledged role in protecting the health of people of color and, thus, may be a site for future interventions to reduce health disparities., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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- 2019
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9. One size does not fit all: Links between shift-and-persist and asthma in youth are moderated by perceived social status and experience of unfair treatment.
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Lam PH, Miller GE, Chiang JJ, Levine CS, Le V, Shalowitz MU, Story RE, and Chen E
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- Adolescent, Child, Female, Humans, Income, Male, Parents, Perception, Adaptation, Psychological, Asthma psychology, Quality of Life, Social Class, Stress, Psychological psychology
- Abstract
The links between low socioeconomic status and poor health are well established, yet despite adversity, some individuals with low socioeconomic status appear to avoid these negative consequences through adaptive coping. Previous research found a set of strategies, called shift-and-persist (shifting the self to stressors while persisting by finding meaning), to be particularly adaptive for individuals with low socioeconomic status, who typically face more uncontrollable stressors. This study tested (a) whether perceived social status, similar to objective socioeconomic status, would moderate the link between shift-and-persist and health, and (b) whether a specific uncontrollable stressor, unfair treatment, would similarly moderate the health correlates of shift-and-persist. A sample of 308 youth (Meanage = 13.0, range 8-17), physician diagnosed with asthma, completed measures of shift-and-persist, unfair treatment, asthma control, and quality of life in the lab, and 2 weeks of daily diaries about their asthma symptoms. Parents reported on perceived family social status. Results indicated that shift-and-persist was associated with better asthma profiles, only among youth from families with lower (vs. higher) parent-reported perceived social status. Shift-and-persist was also associated with better asthma profiles, only among youth who experienced more (vs. less) unfair treatment. These findings suggest that the adaptive values of coping strategies for youth with asthma depend on the family's perceived social status and on the stressor experienced.
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- 2018
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10. Family obligations and asthma in youth: The moderating role of socioeconomic status.
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Lam PH, Levine CS, Chiang JJ, Shalowitz MU, Story RE, Hayen R, Sinard RN, and Chen E
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- Adolescent, Child, Exhalation, Family Relations, Female, Humans, Income, Inflammation, Male, Mental Health, Parents, Asthma therapy, Caregivers, Family, Social Class, Social Responsibility
- Abstract
Objective: Fulfilling family obligations-providing instrumental help to and spending time with family-is a common aspect of family relationships. However, whether fulfilling these obligations links with physical health remains unclear. In this study, we investigated whether fulfilling family obligations was associated with asthma outcomes among youth, and whether these associations differed depending on family socioeconomic status (SES)., Method: Participants were 172 youth, 8 to 17 years of age (Mage = 12.1; 54% boys) who had been physician-diagnosed with asthma and reported on family-obligation frequency; completed the Asthma Control Test (ACT; Nathan et al., 2004), a clinical measure of asthma control; and completed a measure of airway inflammation (i.e., fractional exhaled nitric oxide). Parents also completed the ACT in reference to their asthmatic children and reported on family income., Results: Fulfilling family obligations was not associated with asthma outcomes (βs < .14, ps > .075). However, SES (family income) interacted with family obligations, such that fulfilling family obligations was associated with greater airway inflammation (interaction term β = -.17, p = .023) and poorer parent-reported asthma control (interaction term β = .15, p = .039), only among youth from lower SES backgrounds. Exploratory analyses suggest that these interactions were robust against covariates and were largely consistent across age and the two dimensions of family-obligation behaviors., Conclusion: Findings from this study suggest that among youth from lower SES backgrounds, engaging in more frequent family-obligation behaviors may have negative repercussions in terms of their asthma. (PsycINFO Database Record, ((c) 2018 APA, all rights reserved).)
- Published
- 2018
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11. Culture and social hierarchy: Self- and other-oriented correlates of socioeconomic status across cultures.
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Miyamoto Y, Yoo J, Levine CS, Park J, Boylan JM, Sims T, Markus HR, Kitayama S, Kawakami N, Karasawa M, Coe CL, Love GD, and Ryff CD
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- Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Japan ethnology, Male, Middle Aged, United States ethnology, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Hierarchy, Social, Social Class, Social Values, Socialization
- Abstract
Current theorizing on socioeconomic status (SES) focuses on the availability of resources and the freedom they afford as a key determinant of the association between high SES and stronger orientation toward the self and, by implication, weaker orientation toward others. However, this work relies nearly exclusively on data from Western countries where self-orientation is strongly sanctioned. In the present work, we predicted and found that especially in East Asian countries, where other-orientation is strongly sanctioned, high SES is associated with stronger other-orientation as well as with self-orientation. We first examined both psychological attributes (Study 1, N = 2,832) and socialization values (Study 2a, N = 4,675) in Japan and the United States. In line with the existent evidence, SES was associated with greater self-oriented psychological attributes and socialization values in both the U.S. and Japan. Importantly, however, higher SES was associated with greater other orientation in Japan, whereas this association was weaker or even reversed in the United States. Study 2b (N = 85,296) indicated that the positive association between SES and self-orientation is found, overall, across 60 nations. Further, Study 2b showed that the positive association between SES and other-orientation in Japan can be generalized to other Confucian cultures, whereas the negative association between SES and other-orientation in the U.S. can be generalized to other Frontier cultures. Implications of the current findings for modernization and globalization are discussed. (PsycINFO Database Record, ((c) 2018 APA, all rights reserved).)
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- 2018
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12. Psychological buffers against poor health: the role of the socioeconomic environment.
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Levine CS
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- Humans, Social Environment, Culture, Emotions, Health Status, Socioeconomic Factors, Thinking
- Abstract
Beliefs, emotions, and other psychological resources can protect physical health. Notably, however, the particular ways of thinking, feeling, and acting that are associated with better health can vary with one's socioeconomic status (SES). Those that are most protective reflect what is afforded in and valued by the context. Specifically, in higher SES environments, where people often have the resources to be independent and influence their own destinies, beliefs that reflect independence and a focus on the individual predict better health. In contrast, in lower SES environments, where people often encounter more constraints, beliefs and coping strategies that reflect connection to others, and adjustment to the environment predict better health. Understanding these differences will help to address health disparities., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2017
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13. Associations between spontaneous parental perspective-taking and stimulated cytokine responses in children with asthma.
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Manczak EM, Levine CS, Ehrlich KB, Basu D, McAdams DP, and Chen E
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- Adolescent, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Asthma drug therapy, Cytokines metabolism, Parents psychology
- Abstract
Objectives: Cognitive empathy in parents-reflecting the extent to which one considers the perspectives and emotions of others-is hypothesized to contribute to family social environments in ways that affect youths' physical health. Using a novel assessment technique for cognitive empathy, the current study examined associations between spontaneous parental perspective-taking and key inflammatory processes implicated in pediatric asthma., Method: One hundred thirty children (ages 9-17) with physician-diagnosed asthma, along with 1 parent, participated in the current study. Parents completed an interview from which statements of perspective-taking were coded and youths provided blood samples., Results: Youths whose parents demonstrated greater spontaneous perspective-taking during the interview had cells that mounted smaller inflammatory responses to stimulation by nonspecific, asthma-specific, and viral analogue ligands, as well as cells that showed greater sensitivity to the anti-inflammatory effects of glucocorticoids. These results were not accounted for by parental warmth or parent or youth depressive symptoms, nor by covariates of race, age, gender, parental education level, use of asthma medications over the past week, or asthma severity., Conclusions: These findings suggest that parental perspective-taking may have implications for biological processes relevant to childhood asthma. (PsycINFO Database Record, ((c) 2017 APA, all rights reserved).)
- Published
- 2017
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14. Moderators of the relationship between frequent family demands and inflammation among adolescents.
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Levine CS, Hoffer LC, and Chen E
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- Adolescent, Female, Humans, Male, Family Relations psychology, Inflammation therapy
- Abstract
Objective: Frequent demands from others in relationships are associated with worse physiological and health outcomes. The present research investigated 2 potential moderators of the relationship between frequency of demands from one's family and inflammatory profiles among adolescents: (a) closeness of adolescents' relationships with their families, and (b) the frequency with which adolescents provided help to their families., Method: Two hundred thirty-four adolescents, ages 13-16 (Mage = 14.53; 47.83% male), completed a daily dairy in which they reported on the frequency of demands made by family members. They were also interviewed about the closeness of their family relationships and reported in the daily diary on how frequently they provided help to their families. Adolescents also underwent a blood draw to assess low-grade inflammation and proinflammatory cytokine production in response to bacterial stimulation., Results: More frequent demands from family predicted higher levels of low-grade inflammation and cytokine production in response to bacterial stimulation in adolescents. Family closeness moderated the relationship between frequent demands and stimulated cytokine production such that more frequent demands predicted higher cytokine production among adolescents who were closer to their families. Furthermore, frequency of providing help moderated the relationship between frequent demands and both low-grade inflammation and stimulated cytokine production, such that more frequent demands predicted worse inflammatory profiles among adolescents who provided more help to their families., Conclusions: These findings build on previous work on family demands and health to show under what circumstances family demands might have a physiological cost. (PsycINFO Database Record, ((c) 2017 APA, all rights reserved).)
- Published
- 2017
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15. Just World Beliefs Are Associated With Lower Levels of Metabolic Risk and Inflammation and Better Sleep After an Unfair Event.
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Levine CS, Basu D, and Chen E
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- Adult, Body Mass Index, Cholesterol blood, Female, Glycated Hemoglobin metabolism, Humans, Inflammation blood, Male, Middle Aged, Stress, Psychological blood, Attitude, Inflammation metabolism, Sleep physiology, Social Justice, Stress, Psychological metabolism, Stress, Psychological psychology
- Abstract
This study's goal was to conduct a preliminary test of the theory that just world beliefs can buffer against negative physiological outcomes after people experience certain types of negative life events by testing associations between just world beliefs and physiological outcomes among people with different life event histories. In a sample of 247 adults (M
age = 46.01; 24.31% men; 60.78% White), this research investigated the relationship between just world beliefs and metabolic symptoms, inflammation, and sleep among people who had recently experienced an unfair event, another type of negative event, or no negative event. Stronger just world beliefs correlated with lower metabolic risk, lower inflammation, and better sleep among people who had recently experienced an unfair event, but not among those in the other two event groups. These findings suggest that people's beliefs about the world may interact with their life experiences in ways that have implications for health-relevant outcomes., (© 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)- Published
- 2017
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16. Difficult Family Relationships, Residential Greenspace, and Childhood Asthma.
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Chen E, Miller GE, Shalowitz MU, Story RE, Levine CS, Hayen R, Sbihi H, and Brauer M
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- Adolescent, Asthma physiopathology, Asthma psychology, Child, Female, Housing, Humans, Male, Surveys and Questionnaires, Asthma etiology, Environmental Exposure, Family Relations psychology, Parent-Child Relations, Parenting psychology
- Abstract
Background and Objectives: Both the social environment and the physical environment are increasingly recognized as important to childhood diseases such as asthma. This study tested a novel hypothesis: that living in areas high in greenspace may help buffer the effects of difficult family relationships for children with asthma., Methods: A total of 150 children (ages 9-17), physician-diagnosed with asthma, participated in this study. To assess difficulties in parent-child relationships, parents and children completed measures of harsh/inconsistent parenting and parental hostility. Residential greenspace was calculated by using satellite-derived Normalized Difference Vegetation Index with a buffer of 250 m around the residential address. Outcomes included both clinical and biological measures: asthma control and functional limitations, as well as airway inflammation (fractional concentration of exhaled nitric oxide) and glucocorticoid receptor expression in T-helper cells., Results: After controlling for potential confounding variables, including family income, child demographics, and child medical variables, few main effects were found. However, interactions between residential greenspace and difficult family relationships were found for asthma control ( P = .02), asthma functional limitations ( P = .04), airway inflammation ( P = .007), and the abundance of glucocorticoid receptor in T-helper cells ( P = .05). These interactions were all in a direction such that as the quality of parent-child relationships improved, greenspace became more strongly associated with better asthma outcomes., Conclusions: These findings suggest synergistic effects of positive environments across the physical and social domains. Children with asthma appear to benefit the most when they both live in high greenspace areas and have positive family relationships., Competing Interests: POTENTIAL CONFLICT OF INTEREST: The authors have indicated they have no potential conflicts of interest to disclose., (Copyright © 2017 by the American Academy of Pediatrics.)
- Published
- 2017
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17. Dimensions of Socioeconomic Status and Childhood Asthma Outcomes: Evidence for Distinct Behavioral and Biological Associations.
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Chen E, Shalowitz MU, Story RE, Ehrlich KB, Levine CS, Hayen R, Leigh AK, and Miller GE
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- Adolescent, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Asthma blood, Asthma epidemiology, Asthma immunology, Asthma prevention & control, Educational Status, Health Behavior, Income statistics & numerical data, Social Class
- Abstract
Objectives: The objective of this study was to investigate 2 key dimensions of socioeconomic status (SES)-prestige and resources-and their associations with immune, behavioral, and clinical outcomes in childhood asthma., Methods: Children ages 9 to 17 years with a physician's diagnosis of asthma (N = 150), and one of their parents participated in this study. Children and parents completed interviews and questionnaires about SES (prestige = parent education; resources = family assets), environmental exposures, and clinical asthma measures. Spirometry was conducted to assess children's pulmonary function, and blood was collected to measure cytokine production in response to nonspecific stimulation, allergen-specific stimulation, and microbial stimulation., Results: Higher scores on both dimensions of childhood SES were associated with better clinical outcomes in children (β's from |.18 to .27|, p values < .05). Higher prestige, but not resources, was associated with better home environment control behaviors and less exposure to smoke (β's from |.21 to .22|, p values < .05). Higher resources, but not prestige, was associated with more favorable immune regulation, as manifest in smaller peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) TH1 and TH2 cytokine responses (β's from -.18 to -.19; p values < .05), and smaller proinflammatory cytokine responses (β = -.19; p < .05) after ex vivo stimulation. Higher resources also were associated with more sensitivity to glucocorticoid inhibition of TH1 and TH2 cytokine production (β's from -.18 to -.22; p values < .05)., Conclusions: These results suggest that prestige and resources in childhood family environments have different implications for behavioral and immunological processes relevant to childhood asthma. They also suggest that childhood SES relates to multiple aspects of immunologic regulation of relevance to the pathophysiology of asthma., Competing Interests: and Source of Funding: All authors declare no conflicts of interest.
- Published
- 2016
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18. Culture and Healthy Eating: The Role of Independence and Interdependence in the United States and Japan.
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Levine CS, Miyamoto Y, Markus HR, Rigotti A, Boylan JM, Park J, Kitayama S, Karasawa M, Kawakami N, Coe CL, Love GD, and Ryff CD
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- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Japan, Male, Middle Aged, Surveys and Questionnaires, United States, Young Adult, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Diet, Healthy statistics & numerical data, Social Norms
- Abstract
Healthy eating is important for physical health. Using large probability samples of middle-aged adults in the United States and Japan, we show that fitting with the culturally normative way of being predicts healthy eating. In the United States, a culture that prioritizes and emphasizes independence, being independent predicts eating a healthy diet (an index of fish, protein, fruit, vegetables, reverse-coded sugared beverages, and reverse-coded high fat meat consumption; Study 1) and not using nonmeat food as a way to cope with stress (Study 2a). In Japan, a culture that prioritizes and emphasizes interdependence, being interdependent predicts eating a healthy diet (Studies 1 and 2b). Furthermore, reflecting the types of agency that are prevalent in each context, these relationships are mediated by autonomy in the United States and positive relations with others in Japan. These findings highlight the importance of understanding cultural differences in shaping healthy behavior and have implications for designing health-promoting interventions., (© 2016 by the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Inc.)
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- 2016
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19. Views of a good life and allostatic load: Physiological correlates of theories of a good life depend on the socioeconomic context.
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Levine CS, Atkins AH, Waldfogel HB, and Chen E
- Abstract
This research examines the relationship between one's theory of a good life and allostatic load, a marker of cumulative biological risk, and how this relationship differs by socioeconomic status. Among adults with a bachelor's degree or higher, those who saw individual characteristics (e.g., personal happiness, effort) as part of a good life had lower levels of allostatic load than those who did not. In contrast, among adults with less than a bachelor's degree, those who saw supportive relationships as part of a good life had lower levels of allostatic load than those who did not. These findings extend past research on socioeconomic differences in the emphasis individual or relational factors and suggest that one's theory of a good life has health implications.
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- 2016
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20. Expression of anger and ill health in two cultures: an examination of inflammation and cardiovascular risk.
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Kitayama S, Park J, Boylan JM, Miyamoto Y, Levine CS, Markus HR, Karasawa M, Coe CL, Kawakami N, Love GD, and Ryff CD
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- Aged, Cardiovascular Diseases epidemiology, Cultural Characteristics, Female, Humans, Inflammation epidemiology, Japan epidemiology, Male, Middle Aged, Risk Factors, Social Environment, United States epidemiology, Anger physiology, Cardiovascular Diseases etiology, Cardiovascular Diseases psychology, Inflammation etiology, Inflammation psychology
- Abstract
Expression of anger is associated with biological health risk (BHR) in Western cultures. However, recent evidence documenting culturally divergent functions of the expression of anger suggests that its link with BHR may be moderated by culture. To test this prediction, we examined large probability samples of both Japanese and Americans using multiple measures of BHR, including pro-inflammatory markers (interleukin-6 and C-reactive protein) and indices of cardiovascular malfunction (systolic blood pressure and ratio of total to HDL cholesterol). We found that the link between greater expression of anger and increased BHR was robust for Americans. As predicted, however, this association was diametrically reversed for Japanese, among whom greater expression of anger predicted reduced BHR. These patterns were unique to the expressive facet of anger and remained after we controlled for age, gender, health status, health behaviors, social status, and reported experience of negative emotions. Implications for sociocultural modulation of bio-physiological responses are discussed., (© The Author(s) 2015.)
- Published
- 2015
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21. Subjective and Objective Hierarchies and Their Relations to Psychological Well-Being: A U.S/Japan Comparison.
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Curhan KB, Levine CS, Markus HR, Kitayama S, Park J, Karasawa M, Kawakami N, Love GD, Coe CL, Miyamoto Y, and Ryff CD
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Hierarchy can be conceptualized as objective social status (e.g., education level) or subjective social status (i.e., one's own judgment of one's status). Both forms predict well-being. This is the first investigation of the relative strength of these hierarchy-well-being relationships in the U.S. and Japan, cultural contexts with different normative ideas about how social status is understood and conferred. In probability samples of Japanese (N=1027) and U.S. (N=1805) adults, subjective social status more strongly predicted life satisfaction, positive affect, sense of purpose, and self acceptance in the U.S. than in Japan. In contrast, objective social status more strongly predicted life satisfaction, positive relations with others, and self acceptance in Japan than in the U.S. These differences reflect divergent cultural models of self. The emphasis on independence characteristic of the U.S. affords credence to one's own judgment (subjective status) and the interdependence characteristic of Japan to what others can observe (objective status).
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- 2014
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22. Negative emotions predict elevated interleukin-6 in the United States but not in Japan.
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Miyamoto Y, Boylan JM, Coe CL, Curhan KB, Levine CS, Markus HR, Park J, Kitayama S, Kawakami N, Karasawa M, Love GD, and Ryff CD
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- Female, Humans, Japan, Male, Middle Aged, Personality physiology, United States, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Emotions physiology, Interleukin-6 blood
- Abstract
Previous studies conducted in Western cultures have shown that negative emotions predict higher levels of pro-inflammatory biomarkers, specifically interleukin-6 (IL-6). This link between negative emotions and IL-6 may be specific to Western cultures where negative emotions are perceived to be problematic and thus may not extend to Eastern cultures where negative emotions are seen as acceptable and normal. Using samples of 1044 American and 382 Japanese middle-aged and older adults, we investigated whether the relationship between negative emotions and IL-6 varies by cultural context. Negative emotions predicted higher IL-6 among American adults, whereas no association was evident among Japanese adults. Furthermore, the interaction between culture and negative emotions remained even after controlling for demographic variables, psychological factors (positive emotions, neuroticism, extraversion), health behaviors (smoking status, alcohol consumption), and health status (chronic conditions, BMI). These findings highlight the role of cultural context in shaping how negative emotions affect inflammatory physiology and underscore the importance of cultural ideas and practices relevant to negative emotions for understanding of the interplay between psychology, physiology, and health., (Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2013
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23. The role of non-verbal behaviour in racial disparities in health care: implications and solutions.
- Author
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Levine CS and Ambady N
- Subjects
- Communication, Culture, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Humans, Racism, Stereotyped Behavior, Treatment Outcome, Gestures, Healthcare Disparities, Minority Groups psychology, Physician-Patient Relations
- Abstract
Context: People from racial minority backgrounds report less trust in their doctors and have poorer health outcomes. Although these deficiencies have multiple roots, one important set of explanations involves racial bias, which may be non-conscious, on the part of providers, and minority patients' fears that they will be treated in a biased way. Here, we focus on one mechanism by which this bias may be communicated and reinforced: namely, non-verbal behaviour in the doctor-patient interaction., Methods: We review 2 lines of research on race and non-verbal behaviour: (i) the ways in which a patient's race can influence a doctor's non-verbal behaviour toward the patient, and (ii) the relative difficulty that doctors can have in accurately understanding the nonverbal communication of non-White patients. Further, we review research on the implications that both lines of work can have for the doctor-patient relationship and the patient's health., Results: The research we review suggests that White doctors interacting with minority group patients are likely to behave and respond in ways that are associated with worse health outcomes., Discussion: As doctors' disengaged non-verbal behaviour towards minority group patients and lower ability to read minority group patients' non-verbal behaviours may contribute to racial disparities in patients' satisfaction and health outcomes, solutions that target non-verbal behaviour may be effective. A number of strategies for such targeting are discussed., (© 2013 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Race and the fragility of the legal distinction between juveniles and adults.
- Author
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Rattan A, Levine CS, Dweck CS, and Eberhardt JL
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Data Collection, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, United States, Criminal Law, Juvenile Delinquency legislation & jurisprudence, Punishment psychology, Racial Groups
- Abstract
Legal precedent establishes juvenile offenders as inherently less culpable than adult offenders and thus protects juveniles from the most severe of punishments. But how fragile might these protections be? In the present study, simply bringing to mind a Black (vs. White) juvenile offender led participants to view juveniles in general as significantly more similar to adults in their inherent culpability and to express more support for severe sentencing. Indeed, these differences in participants' perceptions of this foundational legal precedent distinguishing between juveniles and adults accounted for their greater support for severe punishment. These results highlight the fragility of protections for juveniles when race is in play. Furthermore, we suggest that this fragility may have broad implications for how juveniles are seen and treated in the criminal justice system.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Opting out or denying discrimination? How the framework of free choice in American society influences perceptions of gender inequality.
- Author
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Stephens NM and Levine CS
- Subjects
- Adult, Culture, Female, Humans, United States, Workplace psychology, Young Adult, Attitude, Choice Behavior, Denial, Psychological, Interpersonal Relations, Mothers psychology, Prejudice
- Abstract
American women still confront workplace barriers (e.g., bias against mothers, inflexible policies) that hinder their advancement at the upper levels of organizations. However, most Americans fail to recognize that such gender barriers still exist. Focusing on mothers who have left the workforce, we propose that the prevalent American assumption that actions are a product of choice conceals workplace barriers by communicating that opportunities are equal and that behavior is free from contextual influence. Study 1 reveals that stay-at-home mothers who view their own workplace departure as an individual choice experience greater well-being but less often recognize workplace barriers and discrimination as a source of inequality than do mothers who do not view their workplace departure as an individual choice. Study 2 shows that merely exposing participants to a message that frames actions in terms of individual choice increases participants' belief that society provides equal opportunities and that gender discrimination no longer exists. By concealing the barriers that women still face in the workplace, this choice framework may hinder women's long-term advancement in society.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Study of the performance of a novel 1 mm resolution dual-panel PET camera design dedicated to breast cancer imaging using Monte Carlo simulation.
- Author
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Zhang J, Olcott PD, Chinn G, Foudray AM, and Levine CS
- Subjects
- Computer Simulation, Computer-Aided Design, Equipment Design, Equipment Failure Analysis, Humans, Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted instrumentation, Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted methods, Monte Carlo Method, Positron-Emission Tomography methods, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Breast Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Gamma Cameras, Image Enhancement instrumentation, Models, Biological, Positron-Emission Tomography instrumentation
- Abstract
We studied the performance of a dual-panel positron emission tomography (PET) camera dedicated to breast cancer imaging using Monte Carlo simulation. The PET camera under development has two 10x 15 cm(2) plates that are constructed from arrays of I X 1 X 3 mm(3) LSO crystals coupled to novel ultra-thin (<200 Am) silicon position-sensitive avalanche photodiodes (PSAPD). In this design the photodetectors are configured "edge-on" with respect to incoming photons which encounter a minimum of 2 cm thick of LSO with directly measured photon interaction depth. Simulations predict that this camera will have 10-15% photon sensitivity, for an 8-4 cm panel separation. Detector measurements show approximately 1 mm(3) intrinsic spatial resolution, <12% energy resolution, and approximately 2 ns coincidence time resolution. By performing simulated dual-panel PET studies using a phantom comprising active breast, heart, and torso tissue, count performance was studied as a function of coincident time and energy windows. We also studied visualization of hot spheres of 2.5-4.0 mm diameter and various locations within the simulated breast tissue for 1 X 1 X 3 mm(3), 2 x 2 x 10 mm(3), 3 x 3 x 30 mm(3), and 4 X 4 X 20 mm(3) LSO crystal resolutions and different panel separations. Images were reconstructed by focal plane tomography with attenuation and normalization corrections applied. Simulation results indicate that with an activity concentration ratio of tumor:breast:heart:torso of 10:1:10:1 and 30 s of acquisition time, only the dual-plate PET camera comprising 1 X 1 X 3 mm(3) crystals could resolve 2.5 mm diameter spheres with an average peak-to-valley ratio of 1.3.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Antinociceptive tolerance revealed by cumulative intracranial microinjections of morphine into the periaqueductal gray in the rat.
- Author
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Morgan MM, Fossum EN, Levine CS, and Ingram SL
- Subjects
- Animals, Drug Tolerance, Male, Microinjections, Rats, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Analgesics, Opioid administration & dosage, Morphine administration & dosage, Periaqueductal Gray
- Abstract
The periaqueductal gray (PAG) appears to play a key role in morphine antinociception and tolerance. The objective of this manuscript is to develop a cumulative dose microinjection procedure so the hypothesized role of the PAG in morphine antinociceptive tolerance can be assessed using dose-response analysis. Rats were implanted with a guide cannula into the ventrolateral PAG. Microinjection of cumulative half log doses of morphine (0.32, 1, 3.2, and 10 micro g/0.4 micro l) produced antinociception on the hot plate test only at the two highest doses. Microinjection of quarter log doses of morphine into the PAG (1, 1.8, 3.2, 5.6, and 10 micro g/0.4 micro l) resulted in an ED(50) for antinociception of 1.8 mug. Systemic administration of the opioid antagonist naloxone increased the morphine ED(50) to 9.0 micro g. Repeated microinjections of saline into the PAG had no effect on nociception. Pretreatment with twice daily injections of morphine, either systemically (5 mg/kg, s.c.) or into the PAG (5 micro g/0.4 micro l), for 2 days produced a two-fold increase in the ED(50) for morphine antinociception. These data validate the use of an intracranial cumulative dose procedure to assess morphine potency and demonstrate that microinjection of morphine into the PAG is sufficient to produce tolerance.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. The configuration of D-alanyl-D-cycloserine confirmed.
- Author
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Levine CS and Stammer CH
- Subjects
- Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Methylation, Optical Rotatory Dispersion, Protein Conformation, Alanine, Cycloserine, Dipeptides
- Published
- 1972
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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