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Susan Redline

Researcher at Brigham and Women's Hospital

Publications -  1071
Citations -  97728

Susan Redline is an academic researcher from Brigham and Women's Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Polysomnography & Obstructive sleep apnea. The author has an hindex of 138, co-authored 899 publications receiving 80945 citations. Previous affiliations of Susan Redline include Brown University & University of California, Davis.

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Associations Between the Built Environment and Objective Measures of Sleep: The Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis.

TL;DR: A 1‐standard‐deviation increase in Street Smart Walk Score was associated with 23% higher odds of short sleep duration as well as shorter average sleep duration, and results were consistent across other built environment measures.
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Evaluation of a model of attention with confirmatory factor analysis.

TL;DR: The authors used structural equation modeling (specifically, analysis of moment structures) to evaluate the goodness of fit of a model of components of attention (A. F. Mirsky, B. Aheam, and S. G. Arbuckle, 1996) to neuropsychological test data from two samples.
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Impact of Ancestry and Common Genetic Variants on QT Interval in African Americans

J. Gustav Smith, +55 more
TL;DR: The hypotheses that African ancestry and common genetic variants are associated with prolonged duration of cardiac repolarization, a central pathophysiological determinant of arrhythmia, as measured by the electrocardiographic QT interval are tested.
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Multidimensional Sleep and Mortality in Older Adults: A Machine-Learning Comparison With Other Risk Factors.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors applied machine learning to establish the predictive ability of a multidimensional self-reported sleep domain for all-cause and cardiovascular mortality in older adults relative to other established risk factors and to identify which sleep characteristics are most predictive.
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Sleep-disordered breathing and white matter disease in the brainstem in older adults

TL;DR: The frequency of apneas and hypopneas was not associated with brainstem white matter disease in these older adults, and a unique relationship with arousal frequency suggests that ischemic changes in the brainstem may be associated with arousals during sleep.