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Michaeline Jensen

Researcher at University of North Carolina at Greensboro

Publications -  28
Citations -  755

Michaeline Jensen is an academic researcher from University of North Carolina at Greensboro. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 21 publications receiving 378 citations. Previous affiliations of Michaeline Jensen include Arizona State University & University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

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Annual Research Review: Adolescent mental health in the digital age: facts, fears, and future directions

TL;DR: The most recent and rigorous large-scale preregistered studies report small associations between the amount of daily digital technology usage and adolescents' well-being that do not offer a way of distinguishing cause from effect and are unlikely to be of clinical or practical significance.
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We-talk, communal coping, and cessation success in a couple-focused intervention for health-compromised smokers.

TL;DR: Results indicated that pretreatment the authors-talk by the patient's spouse predicted whether the patient remained abstinent 12 months after quitting, and residualized change in they- talk by both partners during the course of intervention predicted cessation outcomes as well.
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Young Adolescents’ Digital Technology Use and Mental Health Symptoms: Little Evidence of Longitudinal or Daily Linkages

TL;DR: Findings from this EMA study do not support the narrative that young adolescents’ digital technology usage is associated with elevated mental-health symptoms.
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Young Adolescents' Digital Technology Use, Perceived Impairments, and Well-Being in a Representative Sample

TL;DR: There was little evidence that digital technology access and use is negatively associated with young adolescents' well-being, and youth from economically disadvantaged families were equally likely to have access to digital technologies, but were more likely than their more affluent peers to report negative online experiences.
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Ethnic Socialization in Neighborhood Contexts: Implications for Ethnic Attitude and Identity Development Among Mexican-Origin Adolescents

TL;DR: Neighborhood Latino ethnic concentration, above and beyond or in combination with mothers' and fathers' ethnic socialization, may have beneficial implications for minority adolescents' ethnic attitude and identity development and two competing hypotheses are tested.