E
Eric Rice
Researcher at University of Southern California
Publications - 195
Citations - 6299
Eric Rice is an academic researcher from University of Southern California. The author has contributed to research in topics: Social network & Population. The author has an hindex of 41, co-authored 193 publications receiving 5370 citations. Previous affiliations of Eric Rice include University of California, Los Angeles & Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Sexually Explicit Cell Phone Messaging Associated With Sexual Risk Among Adolescents
Eric Rice,Harmony Rhoades,Hailey Winetrobe,Monica Sanchez,Jorge Montoya,Aaron Plant,Timothy Kordic +6 more
TL;DR: Sxting appears to be part of a cluster of risky sexual behaviors among adolescents and is recommended that clinicians discuss sexting as an adolescent-friendly way of engaging patients in conversations about sexual activity, prevention of sexually transmitted infections, and unwanted pregnancy.
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HIV disclosure among adults living with HIV.
TL;DR: Research on disclosure among heterosexual adult person(s) living with HIV was reviewed, omitting disclosure of parental HIV to children, and future data on disclosure and interventions designed to increase disclosure or comfort with disclosure must focus on communication strategies adopted by PLH to present a coherent identity.
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Acceptability of smartphone application-based HIV prevention among young men who have sex with men.
TL;DR: Development and testing of smartphone apps for HIV prevention delivery has the potential to engage young men who have sex with men in HIV prevention programming, which can be tailored based on use patterns and motivations for use.
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Sex Risk among Young Men who have Sex with Men who use Grindr, a Smartphone Geosocial Networking Application
Eric Rice,Ian W. Holloway,Hailey Winetrobe,Harmony Rhoades,Anamika Barman-Adhikari,Jeremy J. Gibbs,Adam Carranza,David Dent,Shannon Dunlap +8 more
TL;DR: Overall YMSM who use Grindr practice safer sex with partners met via the application than with partners meeting elsewhere, and sexual risk behavior with geosocial networking-located partners could be addressed with mobile HIV prevention applications, or within Grindr and other similar applications.
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Online Social Networking Technologies, HIV Knowledge, and Sexual Risk and Testing Behaviors Among Homeless Youth
Sean D. Young,Eric Rice +1 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that online social networking and the topics discussed on these networks can potentially increase and decrease sexual risk behaviors depending on how the networks are used.