Health-based homophily in public housing developments
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] B. Hollstein,et al. Advances and innovations in methods for collecting egocentric network data. , 2022, Social science research.
[2] Eugene Barros,et al. Associations Between Public Housing Residency and Health Behaviors in a Cross-Sectional Sample of Boston Adults , 2020 .
[3] J. Vergnes,et al. Oral diseases: a global public health challenge , 2020, The Lancet.
[4] D. Hasin,et al. Using social network analysis to examine alcohol use among adults: A systematic review , 2019, PloS one.
[5] Jingwen Zhang,et al. Social Networks and Health: New Developments in Diffusion, Online and Offline , 2019, Annual Review of Sociology.
[6] Stefan Listl,et al. Oral diseases: a global public health challenge , 2019, The Lancet.
[7] Paul M. Griffin,et al. Changes in Older Adults' Oral Health and Disparities: 1999 to 2004 and 2011 to 2016 , 2019, Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.
[8] B. Perry,et al. TALKING ABOUT TEETH: EGOCENTRIC NETWORKS AND ORAL HEALTH OUTCOMES IN A MEXICAN AMERICAN IMMIGRANT COMMUNITY. , 2019, Advances in medical sociology.
[9] Damon Centola. How Behavior Spreads , 2018 .
[10] Damon Centola. How Behavior Spreads: The Science of Complex Contagions , 2018, Science.
[11] S. Borgatti,et al. Egocentric Network Analysis: Foundations, Methods, and Models , 2018 .
[12] D. Levine,et al. Perceived Diet and Exercise Behaviors Among Social Network Members With Personal Lifestyle Habits of Public Housing Residents , 2018, Health education & behavior : the official publication of the Society for Public Health Education.
[13] S. D. de Vlas,et al. The role of smoking in social networks on smoking cessation and relapse among adults: A longitudinal study. , 2017, Preventive medicine.
[14] J. Havens,et al. Accuracy of name and age data provided about network members in a social network study of people who use drugs: implications for constructing sociometric networks. , 2016, Annals of epidemiology.
[15] Jingbo Meng,et al. Your Health Buddies Matter: Preferential Selection and Social Influence on Weight Management in an Online Health Social Network , 2016, Health communication.
[16] P. Moynihan. Sugars and Dental Caries: Evidence for Setting a Recommended Threshold for Intake. , 2016, Advances in nutrition.
[17] Yefei Zhang. Racial/Ethnic Disparity in Utilization of General Dental Care Services Among US Adults: Medical Expenditure Panel Survey 2012 , 2016, Journal of Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities.
[18] Martin G. Everett,et al. Social Network Analysis for Ego-Nets , 2015 .
[19] Neha Gondal. Inequality Preservation through Uneven Diffusion of Cultural Materials across Stratified Groups , 2015 .
[20] Ashton M. Verdery,et al. Siblings, friends, course-mates, club-mates: how adolescent health behavior homophily varies by race, class, gender, and health status. , 2015, Social science & medicine.
[21] Frank H. Galvan,et al. Do People Know I’m Poz?: Factors Associated with Knowledge of Serostatus Among HIV-Positive African Americans’ Social Network Members , 2015, AIDS and Behavior.
[22] Damon Centola,et al. Choosing your network: social preferences in an online health community. , 2015, Social science & medicine.
[23] C. Pollack,et al. The impact of public housing on social networks: a natural experiment. , 2014, American journal of public health.
[24] E. Bernabé,et al. Sugar-sweetened beverages and dental caries in adults: a 4-year prospective study. , 2014, Journal of dentistry.
[25] G. Ryan,et al. Measuring Agreement between Egos and Alters , 2014 .
[26] G. Bray,et al. Dietary Sugar and Body Weight: Have We Reached a Crisis in the Epidemic of Obesity and Diabetes? , 2014, Diabetes Care.
[27] R Core Team,et al. R: A language and environment for statistical computing. , 2014 .
[28] D. Bowen,et al. Oral Health among Residents of Publicly Supported Housing in Boston , 2014, Journal of Urban Health.
[29] F. Hu,et al. Pro v Con Debate: Role of sugar sweetened beverages in obesity Resolved: there is sufficient scientific evidence that decreasing sugar-sweetened beverage consumption will reduce the prevalence of obesity and obesity-related diseases , 2013 .
[30] S. Albert,et al. Homophily and Health Behavior in Social Networks of Older Adults , 2012, Family & community health.
[31] D. Laaksonen,et al. Does high sugar consumption exacerbate cardiometabolic risk factors and increase the risk of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease? , 2012, Food & nutrition research.
[32] T. Valente. Network Interventions , 2012, Science.
[33] Damon Centola. An Experimental Study of Homophily in the Adoption of Health Behavior , 2011, Science.
[34] G. Robins,et al. Homophily and contagion as explanations for weight similarities among adolescent friends. , 2011, The Journal of adolescent health : official publication of the Society for Adolescent Medicine.
[35] Adam Fletcher,et al. You are what your friends eat: systematic review of social network analyses of young people's eating behaviours and bodyweight , 2011, Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health.
[36] M. Schoeny,et al. Accuracy and bias in adolescents' perceptions of friends' substance use. , 2011, Psychology of addictive behaviors : journal of the Society of Psychologists in Addictive Behaviors.
[37] Shanu Mishra,et al. Sugar-Sweetened Beverages: General and Oral Health Hazards in Children and Adolescents , 2010, International journal of clinical pediatric dentistry.
[38] Winter A. Mason,et al. Real and perceived attitude agreement in social networks. , 2010, Journal of personality and social psychology.
[39] Damon Centola,et al. The Spread of Behavior in an Online Social Network Experiment , 2010, Science.
[40] J. Denney,et al. Socioeconomic Disparities in Health Behaviors. , 2010, Annual review of sociology.
[41] Erin Ruel,et al. Is Public Housing the Cause of Poor Health or a Safety Net for the Unhealthy Poor? , 2010, Journal of Urban Health.
[42] M. Rostila. Birds of a feather flock together--and fall ill? Migrant homophily and health in Sweden. , 2010, Sociology of health & illness.
[43] Bruce G. Link,et al. Social Conditions as Fundamental Causes of Health Inequalities: Theory, Evidence, and Policy Implications , 2010, Journal of health and social behavior.
[44] D. Lauderdale,et al. Fundamental Cause Theory, Technological Innovation, and Health Disparities: The Case of Cholesterol in the Era of Statins∗ , 2009, Journal of health and social behavior.
[45] J. Walther,et al. Health Information, Credibility, Homophily, and Influence via the Internet: Web Sites Versus Discussion Groups , 2008, Health communication.
[46] N. Christakis,et al. Social Networks and Health , 2008 .
[47] N. Christakis,et al. SUPPLEMENTARY ONLINE MATERIAL FOR: The Collective Dynamics of Smoking in a Large Social Network , 2022 .
[48] C. Horsburgh,et al. Use of a population-based survey to describe the health of Boston public housing residents. , 2008, American journal of public health.
[49] jimi adams,et al. To tell the truth: Measuring concordance in multiply reported network data , 2007, Soc. Networks.
[50] Matthew E. Brashears,et al. Social Isolation in America: Changes in Core Discussion Networks over Two Decades , 2006 .
[51] P. Bearman,et al. Suicide and friendships among American adolescents. , 2004, American journal of public health.
[52] B. C. Reed. Evaluating Health Promotion Programs , 2003 .
[53] E. Rogers,et al. Diffusion of innovations , 1964, Encyclopedia of Sport Management.
[54] Hilde van der Togt,et al. Publisher's Note , 2003, J. Netw. Comput. Appl..
[55] J. Murabito,et al. Family breast cancer history and mammography: Framingham Offspring Study. , 2001, American journal of epidemiology.
[56] M. McPherson,et al. Birds of a Feather: Homophily in Social Networks , 2001 .
[57] A. Sheiham,et al. The common risk factor approach: a rational basis for promoting oral health. , 2000, Community dentistry and oral epidemiology.
[58] Kevin White,et al. Accuracy, stability and reciprocity in informal conversational networks in rural Kenya , 2000, Soc. Networks.
[59] T. Valente,et al. Social network associations with contraceptive use among Cameroonian women in voluntary associations. , 1997, Social science & medicine.
[60] David R. Williams,et al. Us socioeconomic and racial differences in health: patterns and explanations , 1995 .
[61] T. Snijders,et al. The Use of Multilevel Modeling for Analysing Personal Networks: Networks of Cocaine Users in an Urban Area. , 1995 .
[62] Bruce G. Link,et al. Social conditions as fundamental causes of disease. , 1995, Journal of health and social behavior.