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Ryan C. Shorey

Researcher at University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee

Publications -  108
Citations -  1719

Ryan C. Shorey is an academic researcher from University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee. The author has contributed to research in topics: Poison control & Domestic violence. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 108 publications receiving 1275 citations. Previous affiliations of Ryan C. Shorey include Ohio University.

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The distal consequences of physical and emotional neglect in emerging adults: A person-centered, multi-wave, longitudinal study

TL;DR: The results suggest that early neglect-exposure poses a risk for the subsequent development of internalizing symptoms and substance use behaviors among emerging adults.
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Dispositional Mindfulness, Shame, and Compulsive Sexual Behaviors among Men in Residential Treatment for Substance Use Disorders.

TL;DR: Investigation of the hypothesis that CSB would not relate to shame among men with high, as opposed to low, levels of dispositional mindfulness suggested that intervention efforts for CSB may benefit from increasing dispositional mindful in an effort to reduce shame-related cognitions.
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Emotion Regulation Moderates the Association Between Proximal Negative Affect and Intimate Partner Violence Perpetration

TL;DR: Results demonstrated that emotion regulation moderated many of the associations between proximal negative affect and physical aggression perpetration, such that negative affect was associated with increased odds of violence when poor emotion regulation was high but not low.
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E-cigarette use of young adults motivations and associations with combustible cigarette alcohol, marijuana, and other illicit drugs

TL;DR: E-cigarettes appear to be a risk marker for the use of substances that are known to pose substantial health problems and youth substance use prevention programs should target the reduction of e-cigarette use with particular attention to addressing their taste appeal.
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Motivations for intimate partner violence in men and women arrested for domestic violence and court referred to batterer intervention programs.

TL;DR: Moves for physical IPV perpetration among a sample of men and women arrested for domestic violence and court referred to batterer intervention programs demonstrated that the most frequently endorsed motives for IPV by both men andWomen were self-defense, expression of negative emotions, and communication difficulties.