A
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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Journal ArticleDOI
Predictors of Subjective Memory in Older Adults
Ann Pearman,Martha Storandt +1 more
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.
Journal ArticleDOI
Effects of human growth hormone, insulin-like growth factor I, and diet and exercise on body composition of obese postmenopausal women
Janice L. Thompson,Gail E. Butterfield,U. Gylfadottir,Jerome A. Yesavage,Robert Marcus,Robert Marcus,Raymond L. Hintz,Ann Pearman,Andrew R. Hoffman,Andrew R. Hoffman +9 more
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.
Journal ArticleDOI
Self-Discipline and Self-Consciousness Predict Subjective Memory in Older Adults
Ann Pearman,Martha Storandt +1 more
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.