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Fengqing Zhang

Researcher at Drexel University

Publications -  82
Citations -  1018

Fengqing Zhang is an academic researcher from Drexel University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Weight loss. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 63 publications receiving 536 citations. Previous affiliations of Fengqing Zhang include Beihang University & Middle Tennessee State University.

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Investigating systematic bias in brain age estimation with application to post‐traumatic stress disorders

TL;DR: The effectiveness of bias adjustment is demonstrated with a large multi‐modal neuroimaging data for both healthy controls and post‐traumatic stress disorders patients obtained from the Philadelphia Neurodevelopmental Cohort.
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Improved prediction of brain age using multimodal neuroimaging data

TL;DR: This work proposes a new method to correct the systematic bias of brain age gap by taking gender, chronological age, and their interactions into consideration and evaluates the prediction performance of 36 combinations of imaging features and ML models including deep learning.
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Return of the JITAI: Applying a Just-in-Time Adaptive Intervention Framework to the Development of m-Health Solutions for Addictive Behaviors.

TL;DR: The approach to various decision points during the development phases is detailed, preliminary findings where applicable, problems that arose during development are identified, and recommendations are provided for researchers who are currently undertaking their own JITAI development efforts.
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Efficacy of environmental and acceptance-based enhancements to behavioral weight loss treatment: The ENACT trial.

TL;DR: This study was designed to compare weight loss through a traditional behavioral treatment approach that integrated skills for managing the obesogenic food environment with an approach that Integrated environmental and acceptance‐based skills (BT + EA).
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Does impulsivity predict outcome in treatment for binge eating disorder? A multimodal investigation.

TL;DR: It is suggested that patients high in negative urgency and with poor response inhibition to food cues may benefit from augmentation of existing treatments to achieve optimal outcomes, and treatment can be improved to accommodate higher levels of baseline impulsivity.