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William S. Bradshaw
Researcher at Brigham Young University
Publications - 41
Citations - 1301
William S. Bradshaw is an academic researcher from Brigham Young University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Sexual orientation & Pregnancy. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 40 publications receiving 1194 citations. Previous affiliations of William S. Bradshaw include University of Utah.
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Nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs cause apoptosis and induce cyclooxygenases in chicken embryo fibroblasts
TL;DR: It is suggested that COXs and their products play key roles in preventing apoptosis in CEFs and perhaps other cell types, and chronic NSAID treatment may lead to increased, rather than decreased, COX activity and, thus, exacerbate prostaglandin-mediated inflammatory effects.
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Structural Determination and Promoter Analysis of the Chicken Mitogen-Inducible Prostaglandin G/H Synthase Gene and Genetic Mapping of the Murine Homolog
TL;DR: Analysis of hamster/mouse somatic cell hybrids with radiolabeled cDNA probes demonstrated that PGHS-1 mapped to chromosome 2 andPGHS-2 mapped to chromosomes 1 of the mouse genome, suggesting that dexamethasone may inhibit PG HS-2 mRNA expression at the post-transcriptional level.
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A comparison of generalizability theory and many-facet Rasch measurement in an analysis of college sophomore writing
TL;DR: In this article, a pilot study was conducted to evaluate and improve the rating procedure proposed for use in a research effort designed to assess the essay writing ability of college sophomores.
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Sexual orientation change efforts among current or former LDS church members.
TL;DR: The overall results support the conclusion that sexual orientation is highly resistant to explicit attempts at change and that SOCE are overwhelmingly reported to be either ineffective or damaging by participants.
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Navigating Sexual and Religious Identity Conflict: A Mormon Perspective
TL;DR: This article examined navigation of sexual and religious identity conflict among 1,493 same-sex attracted current or former members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS) and found that rejection or compartmentalization of sexual identity may be difficult to sustain over time and likely comes at a significant psychosocial cost.