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Elliot M. Friedman
Researcher at Purdue University
Publications - 58
Citations - 4322
Elliot M. Friedman is an academic researcher from Purdue University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Socioeconomic status & Psychosocial. The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 53 publications receiving 3723 citations. Previous affiliations of Elliot M. Friedman include Williams College & Veterans Health Administration.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Sleep Duration in the United States: A Cross-sectional Population-based Study
TL;DR: The authors identify numerous risk factors for long and short sleep; many of those variables are potential confounders of the relation between sleep hours and other health outcomes.
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Psychological Well-Being and Ill-Being: Do They Have Distinct or Mirrored Biological Correlates?
Carol D. Ryff,Gayle D. Love,Heather L. Urry,Daniel Muller,Melissa A. Rosenkranz,Elliot M. Friedman,Richard J. Davidson,Burton H. Singer +7 more
TL;DR: Measures of psychological well-being and ill-being were significantly linked with numerous biomarkers, with some associations being more strongly evident for respondents aged 75+.
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The Flinders Sensitive Line rat: a selectively bred putative animal model of depression.
TL;DR: The FSL rat model of depression exhibits some behavioral, neurochemical, and pharmacological features that have been reported in depressed individuals and has been very effective in detecting antidepressants.
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Variability of sleep duration is related to subjective sleep quality and subjective well-being : An actigraphy study
TL;DR: The findings show that great day-to-day variability in sleep duration – more than averageSleep duration – is related to poor subjective sleep quality and poor subjective well-being.
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Social relationships, sleep quality, and interleukin-6 in aging women
Elliot M. Friedman,Mary S. Hayney,Gayle D. Love,Heather L. Urry,Melissa A. Rosenkranz,Richard J. Davidson,Burton H. Singer,Carol D. Ryff +7 more
TL;DR: A significant interaction showed that women with the highest IL-6 levels were those with both poor sleep efficiency and poor social relations, however, those with low sleep efficiency but compensating good relationships as well as women with poor relationships but compensate high sleep efficiency had IL- 6 levels comparable to those with the protective influences of both good social ties and good sleep.