T
Tamar Pincus
Researcher at Royal Holloway, University of London
Publications - 143
Citations - 7564
Tamar Pincus is an academic researcher from Royal Holloway, University of London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Chronic pain & Low back pain. The author has an hindex of 38, co-authored 128 publications receiving 6732 citations. Previous affiliations of Tamar Pincus include University of London & Arthritis Research UK.
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Book ChapterDOI
Sit-to-Stand Movement Recognition Using Kinect
TL;DR: It is shown that attributes can be extracted from the time series produced by the Kinect sensor using a dynamic time-warping technique, and fed to a random forest algorithm, to recognise anomalous behaviour in time series of joint measurements over the whole movement.
Journal ArticleDOI
Health-related guilt in chronic primary pain: A systematic review of evidence.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors conducted a systematic review of evidence to enable an understanding of the role of health-related guilt in chronic primary pain, and to provide directions for future research, which showed that higher levels of guilt were associated with more pain and pain interference, functional impairment, and poorer psychological and social functioning.
Journal ArticleDOI
Opportunities and challenges around adapting supported employment interventions for people with chronic low back pain : modified nominal group technique
Robert J. Froud,Pål André Amundsen,Serena Bartys,Michele C. Battié,Kim Burton,Nadine E. Foster,Tone Langjordet Johnsen,Tamar Pincus,Michiel F. Reneman,Rob J. E. M. Smeets,Vigdis Sveinsdottir,Gwenllian Wynne-Jones,Martin Underwood,Martin Underwood +13 more
TL;DR: An expert panel believes the most important opportunities/challenges around adapting supporting employment interventions for people with chronic LBP are facilitating integration/communication between systems and institutions providing intervention components, optimising research outputs for informing policy needs, and encouraging discussion around funding mechanisms for research and interventions.
Journal ArticleDOI
The role of observer’s fear of pain and health anxiety in empathy for pain: an experimental study:
TL;DR: The results suggest that more fearful observers, and those in current pain themselves, have higher levels of empathy for pain.
Journal ArticleDOI
Patient-centered consultations for persons with musculoskeletal conditions
TL;DR: In this article , the authors describe a single individual's account of their lived experience of pain and long journey of consultations, and follow each section of this narrative with a short description of the emerging scientific evidence informing on specific aspects of the consultation.