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Brandon Vaidyanathan

Researcher at The Catholic University of America

Publications -  37
Citations -  496

Brandon Vaidyanathan is an academic researcher from The Catholic University of America. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Mental health. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 29 publications receiving 369 citations. Previous affiliations of Brandon Vaidyanathan include Rice University & University of Notre Dame.

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Roundtable on the Sociology of Religion: Twenty-Three Theses on the Status of Religion in American Sociology—A Mellon Working-Group Reflection

TL;DR: This article explored several reasons for American sociologists' neglect of religion, focusing on key historical, conceptual, methodological, and institutional factors, and offered a number of proposals to help remedy American sociology's negligence of religion and advance the study of religion in particular.
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Religion and Charitable Financial Giving to Religious and Secular Causes: Does Political Ideology Matter?

TL;DR: This paper found that the effect of political ideology is completely mediated by participation in religious and civic practices, and suggested that it is less the influence of ideology than active participation of religious, political, and community organizations that explains Americans' financial giving to religious and non-religious organizations.
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Religious Resources or Differential Returns? Early Religious Socialization and Declining Attendance in Emerging Adulthood

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the effects of early socialization factors such as parental religiosity, church support, religious education, and youth group involvement on the decline in religious participation.
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Professional socialization in medicine.

TL;DR: The institutional structures and informal means by which professional norms, beliefs, and behaviors are transmitted to medical trainees may undermine their empathy and idealism.
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International scientific collaborative activities and barriers to them in eight societies

TL;DR: This study highlights areas where efforts could be made to address policy issues, institutional barriers, and national biases to promote more productive collaboration in the global scientific community.