Her primary areas of study are Developmental psychology, Coping, Clinical psychology, Stressor and Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. Her work carried out in the field of Developmental psychology brings together such families of science as Neuroscience, Behavioral neuroscience, Distress and Personality. Her biological study spans a wide range of topics, including Cancer, Immune system and Mood.
Her study in Clinical psychology is interdisciplinary in nature, drawing from both Psychosocial and Anxiety. Her studies deal with areas such as Psychophysiology, Shame, Cognition and Self-esteem as well as Stressor. Margaret E. Kemeny works mostly in the field of Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, limiting it down to topics relating to Disease and, in certain cases, Psychological distress.
Her main research concerns Clinical psychology, Developmental psychology, Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, Immunology and Psychoneuroimmunology. She interconnects Negative affectivity, Anxiety, Social psychology and Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study in the investigation of issues within Clinical psychology. Her research in Developmental psychology intersects with topics in Social threat, Stressor and Cognition.
Her Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome research is multidisciplinary, relying on both Homosexuality, Psychosocial, Disease, Coping and Social support. In the subject of general Immunology, her work in Immune system, Tumor necrosis factor alpha, T cell and Lymphocyte is often linked to Social inhibition, thereby combining diverse domains of study. Margaret E. Kemeny has included themes like Psychotherapist, Internal medicine and Neuroscience in her Psychoneuroimmunology study.
Her scientific interests lie mostly in Clinical psychology, Developmental psychology, Mindfulness, Hydrocortisone and Internal medicine. The various areas that Margaret E. Kemeny examines in her Clinical psychology study include Negative HIV and Anxiety. Her biological study spans a wide range of topics, including Stressor, Perception and Racial ethnic.
Her Mindfulness research incorporates themes from Rumination, Randomized controlled trial, Affect and Respiratory system. The concepts of her Hydrocortisone study are interwoven with issues in Chronic stress and Circadian rhythm. Her Coping study integrates concerns from other disciplines, such as Psychological well-being, Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome and Physical health.
Her primary areas of investigation include Developmental psychology, Mindfulness, Chronic stress, Hydrocortisone and Obesity. Her Developmental psychology research incorporates elements of Stressor, Affect and Respiratory system. The study incorporates disciplines such as Respiratory physiology, Perception and Audiology in addition to Mindfulness.
Margaret E. Kemeny has researched Chronic stress in several fields, including Case-control study and Risk factor. Her work deals with themes such as Oxidative stress, Overweight and Social stigma, which intersect with Hydrocortisone. Her Obesity research includes elements of Physical therapy and Randomized controlled trial.
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Acute stressors and cortisol responses: a theoretical integration and synthesis of laboratory research.
Sally S. Dickerson;Margaret E. Kemeny.
Psychological Bulletin (2004)
Psychological resources, positive illusions, and health.
Shelley E. Taylor;Margaret E. Kemeny;Geoffrey M. Reed;Julienne E. Bower.
American Psychologist (2000)
When the Social Self Is Threatened: Shame, Physiology, and Health
Sally S. Dickerson;Tara L. Gruenewald;Margaret E. Kemeny.
Journal of Personality (2004)
A structured psychiatric intervention for cancer patients: I. Changes over time in methods of coping and affective disturbance.
Fawzy I. Fawzy;Norman Cousins;Nancy W. Fawzy;Margaret E. Kemeny.
Archives of General Psychiatry (1990)
Optimism is associated with mood, coping, and immune change in response to stress.
Suzanne C. Segerstrom;Shelley E. Taylor;Margaret E. Kemeny;John L. Fahey.
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology (1998)
Optimism, coping, psychological distress, and high-risk sexual behavior among men at risk for acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS).
Shelley E. Taylor;Margaret E. Kemeny;Lisa G. Aspinwall;Stephen G. Schneider.
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology (1992)
Cognitive Processing, Discovery of Meaning, CD4 Decline, and AIDS- Related Mortality Among Bereaved HIV-Seropositive Men
Julienne E. Bower;Margaret E. Kemeny;Shelley E. Taylor;John L. Fahey.
Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (1998)
A Structured Psychiatric Intervention for Cancer Patients: II. Changes Over Time in Immunological Measures
Fawzy I. Fawzy;Margaret E. Kemeny;Nancy W. Fawzy;Robert Elashoff.
Archives of General Psychiatry (1990)
Acute threat to the social self: shame, social self-esteem, and cortisol activity.
Tara L Gruenewald;Margaret E Kemeny;Najib Aziz;John L Fahey.
Psychosomatic Medicine (2004)
The Psychobiology of Stress
Margaret E. Kemeny.
Current Directions in Psychological Science (2003)
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