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Danielle Arigo

Researcher at Rowan University

Publications -  81
Citations -  1755

Danielle Arigo is an academic researcher from Rowan University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Social comparison theory & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 67 publications receiving 1227 citations. Previous affiliations of Danielle Arigo include United States Department of Veterans Affairs & Drexel University.

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Using social media for health research: Methodological and ethical considerations for recruitment and intervention delivery.

TL;DR: This Tutorial summarizes the content of the 2017 Society for Behavioral Medicine Pre-Conference Course entitled ‘Using Social Media for Research,’ at which the authors presented their experiences with methodological and ethical issues relating to social media-enabled research recruitment and intervention delivery.
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Reactions to children's faces: Males are more affected by resemblance than females are, and so are their brains

TL;DR: The hypothesis that human males may use and favor facial resemblance as a paternity cue is supported, using high-resolution color morphing and functional magnetic resonance imaging to demonstrate a possible neural mechanism that may account for the observed sex difference.
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Prevalence and correlates of sexual morbidity in long-term breast cancer survivors.

TL;DR: Notable sexual morbidity predictors included mastectomy, which was associated with worse sexual/body change distress, and post-treatment weight gain, which predicted greater body dissatisfaction/ body change stress.
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The history and future of digital health in the field of behavioral medicine.

TL;DR: It is argued that future of digital health behavioral science research lies in finding ways to advance more robust academic- industry partnerships and the need to advance common practices and procedures that support more ethical practices for promoting healthy behavior.
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Social comparisons and chronic illness: research synthesis and clinical implications.

TL;DR: Evidence on patients' comparisons in studies using selection, narration and reaction methods is reviewed and some new basic concepts in social comparison are described, which may advance knowledge about the process in medical patients.