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Dive into the research topics where Mike Carlson is active.

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Featured researches published by Mike Carlson.


Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 2000

Displaced aggression is alive and well : A meta-analytic review

Amy Marcus-Newhall; William C. Pedersen; Mike Carlson; Norman Miller

Content analysis of 122 social psychology textbooks confirmed that displaced aggression received a surge of attention immediately following J. Dollard, L. W. Doob, N. E. Miller, O. H. Mowrer, and R. R. Sears (1939), but subsequent interest sharply declined. Contemporary texts give it little attention. By contrast, meta-analysis of the experimental literature confirms that it is a robust effect (mean effect size = +0.54). Additionally, moderator analyses showed that: (a) The more negative the setting in which the participant and target interacted, the greater the magnitude of displaced aggression; (b) in accord with N. E. Millers (1948) stimulus generalization principle, the more similar the provocateur and target, the more displaced aggression; and (c) consistent with the contrast effect (L. Berkowitz & D. A. Knurek, 1969), the intensity of initial provocation is inversely related to the magnitude of displaced aggression.


Calcified Tissue International | 1988

Peak trabecular vertebral density: a comparison of adolescent and adult females

Vicente Gilsanz; Douglas T. Gibbens; Mike Carlson; M. Ines Boechat; Christopher E. Cann; Eloy Schulz

SummaryTo determine when spinal bone density reaches its peak, the trabecular vertebral density was assessed, via quantitative computed tomography, among females from two age groups: (1) adolescents (aged 14–19 years; n=24); and (2) young adults (aged 25–35 years; n=24). The adolescent girls had a higher mean trabecular vertebral density (P<0.01), suggesting that spinal density reaches its peak around the time of cessation of longitudinal growth and epiphyseal closure.


Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health | 2012

Effectiveness of a lifestyle intervention in promoting the well-being of independently living older people: results of the Well Elderly 2 Randomised Controlled Trial

Florence Clark; Jeanne Jackson; Mike Carlson; Chih-Ping Chou; Barbara J. Cherry; Maryalice Jordan-Marsh; Bob G. Knight; Deborah Mandel; Jeanine Blanchard; Douglas A. Granger; Rand R. Wilcox; Mei Ying Lai; Brett White; Joel W. Hay; Claudia Lam; Abbey Marterella; Stanley P. Azen

Background Older people are at risk for health decline and loss of independence. Lifestyle interventions offer potential for reducing such negative outcomes. The aim of this study was to determine the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of a preventive lifestyle-based occupational therapy intervention, administered in a variety of community-based sites, in improving mental and physical well-being and cognitive functioning in ethnically diverse older people. Methods A randomised controlled trial was conducted comparing an occupational therapy intervention and a no-treatment control condition over a 6-month experimental phase. Participants included 460 men and women aged 60–95 years (mean age 74.9±7.7 years; 53% <


The Journal of Pediatrics | 1990

Osteoporosis after cranial irradiation for acute lymphoblastic leukemia

Vicente Gilsanz; Mike Carlson; Thomas F. Roe; Jorge A. Ortega

12 000 annual income) recruited from 21 sites in the greater Los Angeles metropolitan area. Results Intervention participants, relative to untreated controls, showed more favourable change scores on indices of bodily pain, vitality, social functioning, mental health, composite mental functioning, life satisfaction and depressive symptomatology (ps<0.05). The intervention group had a significantly greater increment in quality-adjusted life years (p<0.02), which was achieved cost-effectively (US


Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 1990

Effects of situational aggression cues: a quantitative review.

Mike Carlson; Amy Marcus-Newhall; Norman Miller

41 218/UK £24 868 per unit). No intervention effect was found for cognitive functioning outcome measures. Conclusions A lifestyle-oriented occupational therapy intervention has beneficial effects for ethnically diverse older people recruited from a wide array of community settings. Because the intervention is cost-effective and is applicable on a wide-scale basis, it has the potential to help reduce health decline and promote well-being in older people. Trial Registration clinicaltrials.gov identifier: NCT0078634.


Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 2002

Cost‐Effectiveness of Preventive Occupational Therapy for Independent‐Living Older Adults

Joel W. Hay; Laurie LaBree; Roger Luo; Florence Clark; Mike Carlson; Deborah Mandel; Ruth Zemke; Jeanne Jackson; Stanley P. Azen

A prospective study was conducted to investigate the possibility of osteoporosis after treatment for childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). Forty-two survivors of ALL had the trabecular bone density of the spine evaluated by quantitative computed tomography, 6 to 98 months (mean 42 months) after completion of chemotherapy. The ALL survivors had significantly lower bone density than age-, gender-, and race-matched nonleukemic control subjects had (10% less, p less than 0.001); this decrease was accounted for solely by the subset of patients who had received cranial irradiation (n = 30; p less than 0.001). The relative reduction in bone density in ALL survivors was unrelated to age at the time of diagnosis or time without therapy. The effects on bone density of 18 Gy and of 22.5 to 25.2 Gy were indistinguishable. We conclude that survivors of ALL commonly have reduced bone density in the lumbar spine and suggest that the diminution is related to nervous system irradiation, not to the disease or to chemotherapy.


Diabetes Research and Clinical Practice | 1995

Continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion (CSII) in children and adolescents with chronic poorly controlled type 1 diabetes mellitus

Bethel S. Steindel; Thomas R. Roe; Gertrude Costin; Mike Carlson; Francine R. Kaufman

Meta-analytic procedures were used to assess the degree to which aggression-related cues present in the environment facilitate aggressive responding among negatively aroused subjects. The first study, which examined the so-called weapons effect, the effect of name-mediated cues, and other cue effects, showed clear evidence that aggression cues augment aggressive responses in negatively aroused subjects. This was true for the overall analysis and for name-mediated cues, but confirmation of the weapons effect was restricted to cases wherein subject sophistication and evaluation apprehension were low. A second study used partial correlation analysis to assess independently the effects of seven potential mediators of aggression cue effects. Of these, target-based facilitation and harm capacity of the aggressive response were found to mediate the magnitude of cue-facilitated aggression. A third study showed that these mediators augmented cue effects among neutral as well as negatively aroused subjects. These outcomes are interpreted as emphasizing the role of cognitive factors in the expression of both impulsive and nonimpulsive aggression.


Metabolism-clinical and Experimental | 1991

Vertebral bone density in insulin-dependent diabetic children

Thomas F. Roe; Stefano Mora; Gertrude Costin; Francine R. Kaufman; Mike Carlson; Vicente Gilsanz

OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the cost‐effectiveness of a 9‐month preventive occupational therapy (OT) program in the Well‐Elderly Study: a randomized trial in independent‐living older adults that found significant health, function, and quality of life benefits attributable to preventive OT.


Clinical Trials | 2009

Confronting challenges in intervention research with ethnically diverse older adults: the USC Well Elderly II Trial

Jeanne Jackson; Deborah Mandel; Jeanine Blanchard; Mike Carlson; Barbara J. Cherry; Stanley P. Azen; Chih-Ping Chou; Maryalice Jordan-Marsh; Todd A. Forman; Brett White; Douglas A. Granger; Bob G. Knight; Florence Clark

This study was undertaken to determine if continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion (CSII) could improve control, diminish episodes of diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA), decrease number of hospitalizations and save health care expenditure in children and adolescents with long-standing poorly controlled diabetes mellitus. A retrospective analysis was done of six patients with type 1 diabetes for 1-8 years, of whom 4 were non-adherent to the diabetic regimen (ages 12-16.5 years) and 2 of whom had brittle diabetes (ages 8.5 and 10 years). These patients were non-randomly placed on the MiniMed (Sylmar, CA) CSII system. The year prior to CSII was compared with the year during pump use. Glycoslyated hemoglobin (HbA1c), spot urinary microalbumin, total cholesterol, insulin dose, growth velocity, number of convulsions and hypoglycemic events, number of episodes of DKA, number of hospitalizations and total inpatient costs were compared for the 2 years. The year prior to CSII, mean HbA1c was 9.02% (S.D. = 0.86%), mean number of hospitalizations was 5.2/patient (S.D. = 4.6), mean number of hospital days was 20.8/patient (S.D. = 14.7) and mean cost was


Journal of Occupational Science | 1998

Practical contributions of occupational science to the art of successful ageing: How to sculpt a meaningful life in older adulthood

Mike Carlson; Florence Clark; Brian Young

29330/patient (S.D. =

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Florence Clark

University of Southern California

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Jeanine Blanchard

University of Southern California

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Jeanne Jackson

University of Southern California

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Cheryl Vigen

University of Southern California

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Deborah Mandel

University of Southern California

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Stanley P. Azen

University of Southern California

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Ruth Zemke

University of Southern California

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Erna Imperatore Blanche

University of Southern California

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Norman Miller

University of Southern California

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Joel W. Hay

University of Southern California

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