Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 25
pro vyhledávání: '"Marcellus M. Merritt"'
Autor:
Michelle R. Di Paolo, Christopher L. Edwards, Gary G. Bennett, Marcellus M. Merritt, Maryam Ayazi, Camela S. Barker, Kayla T. Johnson, Harold G. Koenig, Keith A. Whitfield
Publikováno v:
Journal of Black Psychology. 44:295-321
The present study examined if high levels of religious attendance (ORG), private religious activity (NOR), or intrinsic religiosity (SUB) buffer cardiovascular responses to active speech and anger recall lab stressors alone and by John Henryism Activ
Autor:
Kayla T. Johnson, Maryam Ayazi, Matthew J. Zawadzki, Marcellus M. Merritt, Michelle R. Di Paolo
Publikováno v:
Journal of Applied Biobehavioral Research. 24
Autor:
Matthew J. Zawadzki, Marcellus M. Merritt, Kayla T. Johnson, Michelle R. Di Paolo, Maryam Ayazi
Publikováno v:
Merritt, MM; Zawadzki, MJ; Di Paolo, MR; Johnson, KT; & Ayazi, M. (2017). Dimensions of self-selected leisure activities, trait coping and their relationships with sleep quality and depressive symptoms. LEISURE STUDIES, 36(6), 838-851. doi: 10.1080/02614367.2017.1310283. UC Merced: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/126440ww
LEISURE STUDIES, vol 36, iss 6
Leisure Studies, vol 36, iss 6
LEISURE STUDIES, vol 36, iss 6
Leisure Studies, vol 36, iss 6
Although leisure is presumed to be beneficial, certain profiles of leisure may be especially good. This paper tests whether dimensions of self-selected leisure activities (SSLAs) differentially rel...
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::89ffd85205871a8c5af690092148c659
http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/126440ww
http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/126440ww
Autor:
T.J. McCallum, Marcellus M. Merritt
Publikováno v:
The American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry. 21:46-56
Objectives Religious coping arguably prevents negative health outcomes for stressed persons. This study examined the moderating role of religious coping (positive, negative, and combined) in the connection of care recipient functional status with diu
Autor:
Marcellus M. Merritt, Sarah E. Dillon
Publikováno v:
Journal of Applied Biobehavioral Research. 17:23-37
The present study assessed the moderating role of depressive symptomology in the interactive role of John Henryism (i.e., persistent striving with daily psychosocial demands) and father's educational attainment in estimated cardiorespiratory fitness
Autor:
Julian F. Thayer, John J. Sollers, James A. McCubbin, Richard D. Lane, Michele K. Evans, Marcellus M. Merritt, Alan B. Zonderman
Publikováno v:
Psychosomatic Medicine. 73:743-750
The relationship between blood pressure control and central nervous system (CNS) function in the development of essential hypertension is complex and multidirectional. For example significant, sustained elevations in blood pressure (BP) can produce n
Publikováno v:
The American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry. 19:451-460
Introduction The John Henryism active coping (JHAC) hypothesis suggests that striving with life challenges predicts increased risk for cardiovascular disease for those with scarce coping resources. This study examined the moderating role of JHAC in t
Publikováno v:
Ethnicity & Health. 9:337-347
Objective. To explore the associations among ethnicity, educational attainment, and cortisol secretion. Design. Participants included 63 white (n=31) and African-American (n=32) adult men and women. Subjects provided salivary cortisol samples immedia
Autor:
Gary G. Bennett, Marcellus M. Merritt, Reginald D. Tucker, Christopher L. Edwards, Dwayne T. Brandon, Keith E. Whitfield, John J. Sollers
Publikováno v:
Psychology & Health. 19:369-383
The John Henryism (JH) hypothesis argues that prolonged high-effort coping with chronic psychosocial stressors may be associated with elevated risk for negative health outcomes among those without sufficient socioeconomic resources. Early JH studies
Publikováno v:
American Behavioral Scientist. 47:963-976
The current study examined affective responses to ambiguous interpersonal interactions containing both ambiguous and overtly racist content. Participants included 74 African American males (ages 18-47), half of whom heard a depiction of a negative so