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Angela Clow

Researcher at University of Westminster

Publications -  191
Citations -  11105

Angela Clow is an academic researcher from University of Westminster. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cortisol awakening response & Cortisol secretion. The author has an hindex of 49, co-authored 181 publications receiving 9980 citations. Previous affiliations of Angela Clow include University of Khartoum & Duke University.

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An investigation into asymmetrical cortical regulation of salivary S-IgA in conscious man using transcranial magnetic stimulation

TL;DR: It is concluded that TMS can be used as a tool to investigate cortical regulation of autonomic and immune function in healthy, conscious human subjects and that secretion of saliva and S-IgA is differentially affected by stimulation of the left and right cerebral cortex.
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Assessment of the cortisol awakening response: Real-time analysis and curvilinear effects of sample timing inaccuracy

TL;DR: Cortisol values for verified sampling times accurately mapped on to the typical post-awakening cortisol growth curve, regardless of whether sampling deviated from desired protocol timings, which provides support for incorporating rather than excluding delayed data (up to 15min) in CAR analyses.
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An experimental model of tardive dyskinesias

TL;DR: Changes in rats treated continually and chronically with trifluoperazine suggest that at least striatal dopamine receptors may become “supersensitive” during chronic neuroleptic treatment.
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Cortisol response and subjective sleep disturbance after low-frequency noise exposure

TL;DR: There was a significant effect of group and weekday, indicating that further methodological developments are necessary before saliva cortisol secretion can be reliably used as an indicator of noise-disturbed sleep.
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Measures of exposure to the Well London Phase-1 intervention and their association with health well-being and social outcomes

TL;DR: The measures of intervention exposure used in the cluster randomised trial of the Well London programme, a public health intervention using community engagement and community-based projects to increase physical activity, healthy eating and mental health and well-being in 20 of the most deprived neighbourhoods in London are described.