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John M. Bolland

Researcher at University of Alabama

Publications -  83
Citations -  2462

John M. Bolland is an academic researcher from University of Alabama. The author has contributed to research in topics: Poison control & Suicide prevention. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 82 publications receiving 2180 citations. Previous affiliations of John M. Bolland include Florida State University College of Arts and Sciences.

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Hopelessness and risk behaviour among adolescents living in high-poverty inner-city neighbourhoods.

TL;DR: Results suggest that effective prevention and intervention programmes aimed at inner-city adolescents should target hopelessness by promoting skills that allow them to overcome the limitations of hopelessness.
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Sorting out centrality: An analysis of the performance of four centrality models in real and simulated networks

TL;DR: In this article, the authors assess the performance of four centrality models under a variety of known and controlled situations and assess the robustness and sensitivity of each model under conditions of random and systematic variation introduced into this network.
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Race Matters, Even in Marriage: Identifying Factors Linked to Marital Outcomes for African Americans

TL;DR: This work introduces a model that includes components relevant to understanding marriage among African Americans, including financial strain, racial discrimination, and minority status, and reviews the literature and highlights gaps in existing research.
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Social Connections, Trajectories of Hopelessness, and Serious Violence in Impoverished Urban Youth

TL;DR: Using general growth mixture modeling, this study found two hopelessness trajectory classes for both boys and girls during middle adolescence: a consistently low hopelessness class and an increasingly hopeless class with quadratic change.
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Where Is the Schema? Going Beyond the “S” Word in Political Psychology

TL;DR: The authors argue for a more satisfying political psychology than is offered by research emanating from schema conceptualizations, and argue that schema conceptualization actually contributes to understanding political behavior and attitudes, and that schema theory has potential for future contributions.