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Janine M. Dutcher

Researcher at Carnegie Mellon University

Publications -  37
Citations -  1005

Janine M. Dutcher is an academic researcher from Carnegie Mellon University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Psychological intervention & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 29 publications receiving 591 citations. Previous affiliations of Janine M. Dutcher include University of California, Los Angeles.

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Exposure to an inflammatory challenge enhances neural sensitivity to negative and positive social feedback.

TL;DR: Together, results reveal that individuals exposed to an inflammatory challenge are more "neurally sensitive" to both negative and positive social feedback, suggesting that inflammation may lead to a greater vigilance for both social threats and social rewards.
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The role of the ventral striatum in inflammatory-induced approach toward support figures

TL;DR: Examining whether inflammation leads to a greater desire to approach support figures and greater VS activity to viewing support figures reveals a possible neural mechanism important for sickness-induced social approach and highlights the need for a more nuanced view of changes in social behavior during sickness.
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Identifying Behavioral Phenotypes of Loneliness and Social Isolation with Passive Sensing: Statistical Analysis, Data Mining and Machine Learning of Smartphone and Fitbit Data.

TL;DR: Passive sensing has the potential for detecting loneliness in college students and identifying the associated behavioral patterns and these findings highlight intervention opportunities through mobile technology to reduce the impact of loneliness on individuals’ health and well-being.
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Self-affirmation improves problem-solving under stress.

TL;DR: Self-Affirmation is suggested as a novel means for boosting problem-solving under stress and may have important implications for understanding how self-affirmation boosts academic achievement in school settings.
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Yearning for connection? Loneliness is associated with increased ventral striatum activity to close others

TL;DR: Results extend the current literature by showing that lonely individuals show increased activity in reward-related regions to their closest loved ones, possibly reflecting an increased desire for social connection.