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D-Index & Metrics

Psychology

D-Index
64
Citations
32713
World Ranking
2892
National Ranking
1661

Overview

Margaret E. Kemeny is affiliated with the University of California, San Francisco in the United States. Their research spans multiple interdisciplinary fields primarily focused on medicine and environmental science.

The main fields of study represented in their work include:

  • Medicine
  • Environmental Science

Within these broader fields, their research extends into several subfields such as:

  • General Health Professions
  • Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
  • Physiology
  • Cancer Research
  • Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis

Kemeny's work covers diverse but related topics, prominently featuring studies on:

  • Food Security and Health in Diverse Populations
  • Nutritional Studies and Diet
  • Nutrition and Health in Aging
  • Carcinogens and Genotoxicity Assessment
  • Environmental Toxicology and Ecotoxicology
  • Pharmaceutical and Antibiotic Environmental Impacts

The scientist has contributed to a selection of recent academic papers including:

  • "Food to Overcome Outcomes Disparities: A Randomized Controlled Trial of Food Insecurity Interventions to Improve Cancer Outcomes," published in 2022 in the Journal of Clinical Oncology
  • "Validation of OECD QSAR Toolbox profilers for genotoxicity assessment of pesticides using the MultiCase genotoxicity database," published in 2025 in Computational Toxicology
  • "P05-49 External validation of alert profilers for genotoxicity hazard within the OECD Toolbox," published in 2024 in Toxicology Letters

The publication venues most frequently associated with Kemeny include:

  • Journal of Clinical Oncology
  • Computational Toxicology
  • Toxicology Letters

Frequent collaborators in their research efforts are:

  • Felix M. Kluxen
  • Markus Frericks
  • Djordje Vukelić
  • Roustem Saiakhov
  • Mounika Girireddy

Best Publications

  • Acute stressors and cortisol responses: a theoretical integration and synthesis of laboratory research.

    Sally S. Dickerson;Margaret E. Kemeny

  • Biobehavioral responses to stress in females: tend-and-befriend, not fight-or-flight.

    Shelley E. Taylor;Laura Cousino Klein;Brian P. Lewis;Tara L. Gruenewald

  • Psychological resources, positive illusions, and health.

    Shelley E. Taylor;Margaret E. Kemeny;Geoffrey M. Reed;Julienne E. Bower

  • When the Social Self Is Threatened: Shame, Physiology, and Health

    Sally S. Dickerson;Tara L. Gruenewald;Margaret E. Kemeny

  • 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

  • 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

  • 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

  • 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

  • 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

  • Acute threat to the social self: shame, social self-esteem, and cortisol activity.

    Tara L Gruenewald;Margaret E Kemeny;Najib Aziz;John L Fahey

  • The Psychobiology of Stress

    Margaret E. Kemeny

  • Contemplative/emotion training reduces negative emotional behavior and promotes prosocial responses.

    Margaret E Kemeny;Carol Foltz;James F Cavanagh;Margaret Cullen

  • Elevated Physical Health Risk Among Gay Men Who Conceal Their Homosexual Identity

    Steve W. Cole;Margaret E. Kemeny;Shelley E. Taylor;Barbara R. Visscher

  • Mindfulness Intervention for Stress Eating to Reduce Cortisol and Abdominal Fat among Overweight and Obese Women: An Exploratory Randomized Controlled Study.

    Jennifer Daubenmier;Jean Kristeller;Frederick M. Hecht;Nicole Maninger

  • Black sheep get the blues: A psychobiological model of social rejection and depression

    George M. Slavich;Aoife O’Donovan;Elissa S. Epel;Margaret E. Kemeny

  • Understanding the interaction between psychosocial stress and immune-related diseases: a stepwise progression.

    Margaret E. Kemeny;Manfred Schedlowski

  • Realistic acceptance as a predictor of decreased survival time in gay men with AIDS.

    Geoffrey M. Reed;Margaret E. Kemeny;Shelley E. Taylor;Hui-Ying J. Wang

  • Immunological effects of induced shame and guilt.

    Sally S. Dickerson;Margaret E. Kemeny;Najib Aziz;Kevin H. Kim

  • Psychosocial predictors of gay men's AIDS risk-reduction behavior.

    Lisa G. Aspinwall;Margaret E. Kemeny;Shelley E. Taylor;Stephen G. Schneider

  • ACCELERATED COURSE OF HUMAN IMMUNODEFICIENCY VIRUS INFECTION IN GAY MEN WHO CONCEAL THEIR HOMOSEXUAL IDENTITY

    Steve W. Cole;Margaret E. Kemeny;Shelley E. Taylor;Barbara R. Visscher

Frequent Co-Authors

Shelley E. Taylor
Shelley E. Taylor University of California, Los Angeles
Elissa S. Epel
Elissa S. Epel University of California, San Francisco
Tara L. Gruenewald
Tara L. Gruenewald Chapman University
Suzanne C. Segerstrom
Suzanne C. Segerstrom University of Kentucky
Geoffrey M. Reed
Geoffrey M. Reed Columbia University
Emma K. Adam
Emma K. Adam Northwestern University
Julienne E. Bower
Julienne E. Bower University of California, Los Angeles
Aoife O'Donovan
Aoife O'Donovan University of California, San Francisco
Susan Folkman
Susan Folkman University of California, San Francisco
Jacquelynne S. Eccles
Jacquelynne S. Eccles University of California, Irvine

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