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Joseph R. Rausch

Researcher at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

Publications -  62
Citations -  4142

Joseph R. Rausch is an academic researcher from Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Randomized controlled trial. The author has an hindex of 30, co-authored 53 publications receiving 3607 citations. Previous affiliations of Joseph R. Rausch include University of Notre Dame & University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center.

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Sleep restriction worsens mood and emotion regulation in adolescents

TL;DR: Findings complement prior correlational study results to show that after only a few days of shortened sleep, at a level of severity that is experienced regularly by millions of adolescents on school nights, adolescents have worsened mood and decreased ability to regulate negative emotions.
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Sample Size Planning for Statistical Power and Accuracy in Parameter Estimation

TL;DR: In this paper, a review examines recent advances in sample size planning, not only from the perspective of an individual researcher, but also with regard to the goal of developing cumulative knowledge.
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Sample Size Planning for Statistical Power and Accuracy in Parameter Estimation

TL;DR: This review examines recent advances in sample size planning, not only from the perspective of an individual researcher, but also with regard to the goal of developing cumulative knowledge, for accuracy in parameter estimation (AIPE).
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Analytic Methods for Questions Pertaining to a Randomized Pretest, Posttest, Follow-Up Design

TL;DR: This article demonstrates that the pretest should be utilized as a covariate in the model rather than as a level of the time factor or as part of the dependent variable within the analysis of group differences.
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Prevalence, Patterns, and Persistence of Sleep Problems in the First 3 Years of Life

TL;DR: Night wakings and shorter sleep duration were associated with a parent-reported sleep problem during infancy and early toddlerhood, whereas nightmares and restless sleep emerged as associations with report of a sleep problem in later developmental periods.