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Jason C. Nellis

Researcher at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

Publications -  31
Citations -  695

Jason C. Nellis is an academic researcher from Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. The author has contributed to research in topics: Facial paralysis & Attractiveness. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 27 publications receiving 444 citations. Previous affiliations of Jason C. Nellis include Johns Hopkins University.

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Association Among Facial Paralysis, Depression, and Quality of Life in Facial Plastic Surgery Patients

TL;DR: For treatment-seeking patients, facial paralysis was significantly associated with increased depression and worse QOL scores, and women with a greater severity of facial paralysis were more likely to screen positive for depression.
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Association Between the Use of Social Media and Photograph Editing Applications, Self-esteem, and Cosmetic Surgery Acceptance

TL;DR: The findings suggest that the use of certain social media and photo editing applications may be associated with increased acceptance of cosmetic surgery, and can help guide future patient-physician discussions regarding cosmetic surgery perceptions, which vary by social media or photo editing application use.
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Impact of a mentored student clerkship on underrepresented minority diversity in otolaryngology-head and neck surgery.

TL;DR: To describe the impact of a mentored clerkship initiative on underrepresented minority medical students interested in otolaryngology–head and neck surgery (OHNS), a study of four students at Harvard Medical School found that two were black and one was Asian.
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Objectively measuring social attention of thyroid neck scars and transoral surgery using eye tracking.

TL;DR: Measure the social attention of thyroid neck scars and transoral surgery using eye tracking to identify patients most in need of social attention following surgery.
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The Importance and Psychology of Facial Expression.

TL;DR: Reconstruction surgeries that restore the ability to express emotion can restore normalcy in patients with facial paralysis and suffer social consequences as demonstrated by being rated negatively with regards to attractiveness, affect display, and other traits.