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Rosalie Corona

Researcher at Virginia Commonwealth University

Publications -  94
Citations -  2047

Rosalie Corona is an academic researcher from Virginia Commonwealth University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Population. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 83 publications receiving 1826 citations. Previous affiliations of Rosalie Corona include Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center & University of California, Los Angeles.

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Timing of Parent and Child Communication About Sexuality Relative to Children's Sexual Behaviors

TL;DR: Many parents and adolescents do not talk about important sexual topics before adolescents' sexual debut, and Clinicians can facilitate this communication by providing parents with information about sexual behavior of adolescents.
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Beyond the "big talk": the roles of breadth and repetition in parent-adolescent communication about sexual topics

TL;DR: Clinicians may want to advise parents about the value of discussing sexual topics repeatedly with their children, because this may provide parents an opportunity to reinforce and build on what they have taught their children and provide children the opportunity to ask clarifying questions as they attempt to put their parents' sexual education into practice.
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Is Affect Aversive to Young Children with Autism? Behavioral and Cardiac Responses to Experimenter Distress

TL;DR: Children with autism gave no evidence of being overly aroused by or avoiding the distressed experimenter, and the heart rate of the children with autism did not change across conditions.
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Evaluation of Talking Parents, Healthy Teens, a new worksite based parenting programme to promote parent-adolescent communication about sexual health: randomised controlled trial

TL;DR: In this article, a worksite-based parenting program, Talking Parents, Healthy Teens, is designed to help parents learn to address sexual health with their adolescent children, and evaluate its effectiveness.
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Social and Cardiac Responses of Young Children with Autism

TL;DR: The findings suggest that the lack of social attention often demonstrated by children with autism does not stem from increased arousal in social situations, and both groups showed heart rate slowing compared with a baseline condition.