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Stefan G. Hofmann

Researcher at Boston University

Publications -  604
Citations -  46024

Stefan G. Hofmann is an academic researcher from Boston University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Anxiety & Social anxiety. The author has an hindex of 97, co-authored 573 publications receiving 38474 citations. Previous affiliations of Stefan G. Hofmann include Stanford University & University of Marburg.

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A meta-analytic review of the effects of psychotherapy control conditions for anxiety disorders

TL;DR: Psychotherapy control conditions are associated with significant improvements when administered to adults suffering from anxiety disorders, and they areassociated with a relatively low attrition rate, which can inform the design of future psychotherapy outcome studies.
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Activation in novice and expert parachutists while jumping

TL;DR: The results are more compatible theoretically with extinction of anticipatory anxiety than with learned anxiety inhibition, and exercise testing at a different location showed that experts were more fit.
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The Multidimensional Nature and Multicultural Validity of a New Measure of Social Anxiety: The Social Anxiety Questionnaire for Adults

TL;DR: This research examined the multidimensional nature and multicultural validity of a newly developed instrument (the Social Anxiety Questionnaire for Adults [SAQ-A]) in two studies with a total of 539 patients diagnosed with social phobia and 15,753 nonpatients from 20 different countries.
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Black Hole Production in Large Extra Dimensions at the Tevatron: Possibility for a First Glimpse on TeV Scale Gravity

TL;DR: The production of black holes in large extra dimensions is studied in this article for Tevatron energies. And they find that black holes may have already been created in small abundance in small-bar p p p$ collisions at $\sqrt s=1.8$ TeV.
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Yoga‐Enhanced Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (Y‐CBT) for Anxiety Management: A Pilot Study

TL;DR: Y-CBT may reduce depression and anxiety in a clinic population where clients suffer from multiple diagnoses including generalized anxiety disorder, and may also reduce depression in those suffering from generalized anxiety.