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David Spiegel

Researcher at Stanford University

Publications -  838
Citations -  50967

David Spiegel is an academic researcher from Stanford University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cancer & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 106, co-authored 733 publications receiving 46276 citations. Previous affiliations of David Spiegel include Tel Aviv University & University of Adelaide.

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Self-Report and Linguistic Indicators of Emotional Expression in Narratives as Predictors of Adjustment to Cancer

TL;DR: Although linguistic indicators of both emotional expression and cognitive processing were generally uncorrelated with self-report measures of emotional suppression and mood disturbance, a significant interaction was observed betweenotional suppression and use of cognitive words on mood disturbance.
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Exploring Binding and Effector Functions of Natural Human Antibodies Using Synthetic Immunomodulators

TL;DR: Head-to-head comparisons of three chemically simple antigens, which are known ligands for endogenous antibodies, reveal rhamnose to be the most efficacious of the synthetic antigen examined.
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Changes in marital and sexual functioning in long‐term survivors and their spouses: Testicular cancer versus hodgkin's disease

TL;DR: Changes in the spouse's importance, influence of the illness on the relationship, and changes in sexual frequency emerged as significant predictors of long‐term changes in marital and sexual functioning for the couple and the need for therapeutic interventions are discussed.
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A Randomized Controlled Trial of Psychosocial Interventions Using the Psychophysiological Framework for Chinese Breast Cancer Patients

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the psychophysiological outcomes of different psychosocial interventions for breast cancer patients and found that BMS intervention produced the greatest and the most sustained effects.
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Emotional expression and diurnal cortisol slope in women with metastatic breast cancer in supportive-expressive group therapy: a preliminary study.

TL;DR: It is found that steeper cortisol slopes were related to lower repressive-defensiveness and greater primary negative affect expression in line with a priori hypotheses.