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Rachel F. Rodgers

Northeastern University (USA)

SCHOLARLY PAPERS

4

DOWNLOADS

321

TOTAL CITATIONS

0

Scholarly Papers (4)

1.

Social Media Incidental Appearance Exposure and Young People's Body Image

Number of pages: 45 Posted: 13 May 2024
Ann Rousseau and Rachel F. Rodgers
affiliation not provided to SSRN and Northeastern University (USA)
Downloads 200 (386,064)

Abstract:

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Social media, Incidental exposure, Exposure diversity, Body image

2.

Embodiment and Mindful Eating Behaviors in the Context of Ethnicity, Race, And Gender

Number of pages: 32 Posted: 19 Dec 2024
Northeastern University (USA), Northeastern University (USA), Columbia University, Columbia University, University of Minnesota - Minneapolis and University of Minnesota - Minneapolis - Division of Epidemiology and Community Health
Downloads 55 (1,010,164)

Abstract:

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embodiment, body image, mindful eating, race, ethnicity, gender

3.

Who's Most at Risk of Poor Body Image? Identifying Subgroups of Adolescent Social Media Users Over the Course of a Year

Number of pages: 30 Posted: 18 Apr 2023
La Trobe University - School of Psychology and Public Health, Deakin University - Centre for Social and Early Emotional Development, La Trobe University - School of Psychology and Public Health, Northeastern University (USA), University of the West of England (UWE), Australian Catholic University and La Trobe University - School of Psychology and Public Health
Downloads 48 (1,086,013)

Abstract:

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Social Media, body image, subgroups, prospective, adolescents, stability

4.

Adherence to Antipsychotics and Job Acquisition in Patients with First-episode Schizophrenia: A 10-year Follow-up Using the Korean National Health Information Database

Number of pages: 29 Posted: 25 Mar 2026
Mokwon University, affiliation not provided to SSRN, affiliation not provided to SSRN, Northeastern University (USA), affiliation not provided to SSRN and Sangji University
Downloads 18 (1,470,786)

Abstract:

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schizophrenia, Medication Adherence, Antipsychotic Agents, Employment, National Health Insurance Service, Cohort Study