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George A. Bonanno

Researcher at Columbia University

Publications -  269
Citations -  35756

George A. Bonanno is an academic researcher from Columbia University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Grief & Psychological resilience. The author has an hindex of 76, co-authored 250 publications receiving 30634 citations. Previous affiliations of George A. Bonanno include University of Hong Kong & University of British Columbia.

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Trajectories of body image and sexuality during the first year following diagnosis of breast cancer and their relationship to 6 years psychosocial outcomes.

TL;DR: Self-image trajectories over the first year diagnosis predicted 6-years psychosocial outcomes; Women with high-stable level of self-image had the best 6-year self- image and sexuality; women with initial low level ofSelf- image had significantly greater long-term psychological distress; low TDM difficulties and high treatment outcome satisfaction predicted high and stable self-images and sexuality.
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From Marianthal to Latent Growth Mixture Modeling: A Return to the Exploration of Individual Differences in Response to Unemployment

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors search for individual differences in response to job-loss using Latent Growth Mixture Modeling (LGMM) framework and find that the majority of individuals demonstrate no long-term effects on life satisfaction.
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Optimism and Death: Predicting the Course and Consequences of Depression Trajectories in Response to Heart Attack

TL;DR: Findings indicated that individuals were at significantly increased risk for mortality when depression emerged after their first-reported MI, compared with resilient individuals who had no significant post-MI elevation in depression symptomatology.
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Measuring ability to enhance and suppress emotional expression: The Flexible Regulation of Emotional Expression (FREE) Scale.

TL;DR: The aim of the current investigation was to develop and validate a Flexible Regulation of Emotional Expression (FREE) Scale that measures a person's ability to enhance and suppress displayed emotion across an array of hypothetical contexts and suggest that it is a valid and flexible measure of expressive regulation ability.
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Retrospective memory bias for the frequency of potentially traumatic events: A prospective study.

TL;DR: Although participants underrecalled the frequency of all types of life events, recollection was more accurate for PTEs than for non-PTEs and high distress at recall was associated with a greater recalled-frequency, but only for people low in trait self-enhancement.