And they found that
in white participants, each stressful event added about a year and a half to normal brain aging.
Among the study's limitations were the absence of a placebo group that could pinpoint the sources of side effects, and a lack of racial diversity, with 88
percent white participants.
«Instead,
white participants failed to reduce their judgments of threat when a (neutral) black male face followed an angry black male face,» the researchers report.
In another study, published in the same issue of JAMA Dermatology, researchers from the University of New Mexico conducted a survey of 429 American Indian and
non-Hispanic white participants and found that American Indian individuals were much less likely to regularly practice safe sun behaviors.
White participants studied a batch of photographs, then tried to deduce, as quickly as possible, which picture a black partner was holding by asking questions about each one in succession.
In one online study, 257
White participants read information supposedly provided by a previous participant, a White 30 year - old man.
White participants whose answers on the initial screening indicated a risk for depression were indeed more likely to actually have major depression at the time of the later interview.
Despite these similarities, the African Americans reported an average of 4.5 stressful events throughout life, compared to just 2.8 reported
by white participants.
African Americans scored significantly higher than
White participants on the Intense - Personal (IP) and Borderline - Pathological (BP) subscales (see Table 1).
In white participants, each stressful experience was associated with brain changes equaling about a year and a half of normal brain aging, according to a report from NPR.
Curated by Michelle Grabner and described by artnet as having a «punk rock spirit», the event — running July 9 to September 18 — consists primarily
of white participants, rendering any claim of its relevance or accuracy in terms of representing Oregon's arts ecology hard to believe.
Interestingly, agapic love scores also differed as a function of participant ethnicity, with African American participants reporting lower levels of agapic love than Latino / a, Asian / Pacific Islander, and
non-Hispanic White participants.
I was at a Native American Theology conference when one of
the white participants stated that we should abandon terms like evangelical and Christian.
He added that the relationship between smell and Parkinson's risk in black participants also appeared not as strong as in
the white participant group.
They also watched silent videos that showed only
the white participants and rated their nonverbal mannerisms for signs of friendliness.
This is contrary to several previous reports from other research groups which looked at behaviour in Asian and
white participants and concluded that culture explained behavioural differences between groups.
This study, published in the July 27, 2011 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association and led by Charis Eng, MD, PhD, Hardis / ACS Professor and Founding Chair of the Genomic Medicine Institute of Lerner Research Institute at Cleveland Clinic, was conducted from 2005 to 2010 at 16 different institutions across the United States and involved 298
white participants with BE, EAC, or both.
Both groups — the African American participants and
the white participants — were highly educated, and the groups did not differ in terms of average age (58), years of school, or the percentage of people who carried the APOE - e4 gene, a genetic risk factor for Alzheimer's disease.
However, «[b] lack participants recommended expelling or suspending children more days than
white participants.»
Of note, the model explained increases in blood pressure over time in all four of the subgroups examined, namely, male and female African - American and
white participants.
Specifically, African American participants reported lower levels of agapic love than did Latino / a, Asian / Pacific Islander, and non-Hispanic
White participants.
We found that high attachment avoidance (fearful and dismissing) was identified as a risk factor for EDI among African American / Black participants, whereas an inverse relationship between fearful attachment and EDI was revealed among European /
White participants in the sample.