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Jeffrey E. Cassisi

Researcher at University of Central Florida

Publications -  72
Citations -  2036

Jeffrey E. Cassisi is an academic researcher from University of Central Florida. The author has contributed to research in topics: Anxiety & Low back pain. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 67 publications receiving 1881 citations. Previous affiliations of Jeffrey E. Cassisi include University of Florida & Fayetteville State University.

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Sex Differences in the Presentation of Chronic Low Back Pain

TL;DR: The treatment of women with chronic low back pain requires attention to work in the home and the financial and social context of work outside the home, which are different for men and women.
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Ambulatory electromyogram activity in the upper trapezius region: patients with muscle pain vs. pain-free control subjects.

TL;DR: Ambulatory measurements of electromyogram activity did not differentiate persons reporting upper trapezius or cervical pain from those that did not report such pain, and these results raise questions regarding the role of ambulatory electromyograms recordings in the evaluation and treatment of muscle pain disorders.
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Affective and Autonomic Responses to Erotic Images: Evidence of Disgust-Based Mechanisms in Female Sexual Interest/Arousal Disorder.

TL;DR: The FSIAD group displayed significantly greater negative facial affect, reported more subjective disgust, and recorded greater heart rate deceleration than the control group in response to erotic stimuli, and greater subjective disgust response corresponded with more sexual avoidance behavior.
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A revised taxonomy of patients with chronic pain.

TL;DR: Analysis of taxonomic categories derived from a reorganization of the popular and useful Multidimensional Pain Inventory/Multiaxial Assessment of Pain system provides evidence for the stability and replicability of the new clusters.
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Comorbidity of schizotypy and psychopathy: Skin conductance to affective pictures

TL;DR: A positive relationship was found between schizotypy and self-reported physical aggression and results do not support autonomic hyporesponsiveness often found in clinical psychopathy, but highlight the need to examine other trajectories of violence within the schizophrenia spectrum disorders.