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Ann Pearman

Researcher at Georgia Institute of Technology

Publications -  36
Citations -  1269

Ann Pearman is an academic researcher from Georgia Institute of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cognition & Personality. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 32 publications receiving 990 citations. Previous affiliations of Ann Pearman include Veterans Health Administration & Georgia State University.

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Predictors of Subjective Memory in Older Adults

TL;DR: Correlations of an objective measure of memory as well as measures of personality, emotional distress, and health with subjective memory evaluations were examined in 283 community-dwelling people aged 45 to 94 years.
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Age Differences in Risk and Resilience Factors in COVID-19-Related Stress.

TL;DR: Examining COVID-19-specific anxiety and proactive coping as potential risk and resilience factors that may be differentially important for younger and older adults in understanding stress experienced due to the CO VID-19 pandemic suggests that anxiety might function as a risk factor whereas proactive coping mayfunction as a resilience factor for older adults’ COVID -19 stress.
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Effects of human growth hormone, insulin-like growth factor I, and diet and exercise on body composition of obese postmenopausal women

TL;DR: It is shown that obese postmenopausal women can lose weight and fat without compromising fat free mass, BMR, or gains in muscle strength, and that GH and IGF-I given together may enhance fat loss over either given alone.
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Mental Health Challenges of United States Healthcare Professionals During COVID-19

TL;DR: Within the context of this pandemic, HCPs were at increased risk for a number of negative well-being outcomes and potential targets, such as adaptive coping training, for intervention are discussed.
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Self-Discipline and Self-Consciousness Predict Subjective Memory in Older Adults

TL;DR: Regression analysis revealed that one facet of conscientiousness ( self-discipline) and two facets of neuroticism (self-consciousness and anxiety) explained almost one third of the variance in subjective memory complaints.