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Frances Mei Hardin

Researcher at University of Missouri

Publications -  7
Citations -  636

Frances Mei Hardin is an academic researcher from University of Missouri. The author has contributed to research in topics: Tinnitus & Cancer. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 7 publications receiving 459 citations. Previous affiliations of Frances Mei Hardin include Case Western Reserve University & Washington University in St. Louis.

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Journal Article

What We Owe To Each Other.

TL;DR: It's significant to wait for the representative and beneficial books to read to feel good about reading, even if you are a good reader or not.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction Therapy on Subjective Bother and Neural Connectivity in Chronic Tinnitus

TL;DR: Participation in an MBSR program is associated with decreased severity in tinnitus symptoms and depression and connectivity changes in neural attention networks and analysis of the resting state functional connectivity MRI data showed increased connectivity in the post-MBSR group in attention networks but not the default network.
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Cognitive impairment after chemotherapy related to atypical network architecture for executive control.

TL;DR: Neuroimaging analyses confirmed self-reported cognitive deficits in women with breast cancer treated with chemotherapy and suggest that some women may be more sensitive to the standard treatments for breast cancer and that this increased sensitivity may result in functional connectivity alterations in the brain networks supporting attention and executive function.
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Surgical management of patients with Eagle syndrome.

TL;DR: Transcervical and transoral styloidectomy are effective treatments for Eagle syndrome with minimal adverse effects and patients with classic symptoms of neck or jaw pain benefit most from surgery.
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Cognitive Training for Adults With Bothersome Tinnitus: A Randomized Clinical Trial

TL;DR: Findings suggest that the computer-based cognitive training program is associated with self-reported changes in attention, memory, and perception of tinnitus, and these changes could be neuroplastic changes in key brain systems involved in cognitive control.