Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Paul E. Baer is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Paul E. Baer.


Journal of Behavioral Medicine | 1992

The relationship of dispositional optimism, daily life stress, and domestic environment to coping methods used by cancer patients

Lois C. Friedman; David V. Nelson; Paul E. Baer; Montague Lane; Frank E. Smith; Rosalind J. Dworkin

The relationship of dispositional optimism, daily life stress, and domestic environment to two types of coping methods was examined in a group of 94 cancer patients. As expected, dispositional optimism and domestic environment made significant contributions to the prediction of avoidance coping. Dispositional optimism contributed significantly to the prediction of active-behavioral coping. Specifically, a significant positive relationship was obtained between active-behavioral coping and optimism. A significant positive relationship also was found between avoidance coping and both daily stress and domestic environment. Avoidance coping was negatively related to dispositional optimism. In multivariate analyses, gender and disease-related variables did not make significant contributions to the prediction of coping method. Suggestions for future research were made.


Journal of Behavioral Medicine | 1987

Stress, coping, family conflict, and adolescent alcohol use.

Paul E. Baer; Lisa Berg Garmezy; Robert J. McLaughlin; Alex D. Pokorny; Mark J. Wernick

This study examined alcohol use among seventh graders in relation to life events, daily hassles, the supportive quality of the family environment, coping, and anxiety. Four hundred twenty-five students participated, 228 girls and 197 boys. Stepwise regression and discriminant function analyses indicated that the students reported more alcohol use if they also reported more life events, more daily hassles, and more conflict in the family. A stress-buffering effect of low family conflict on life events could not be substantiated for extent of alcohol use. The results are discussed in the context of the developmental transitions of adolescence.


Psychosomatic Medicine | 1988

Women with breast cancer: perception of family functioning and adjustment to illness

Lois C. Friedman; Paul E. Baer; David V. Nelson; Montague Lane; Frank E. Smith; Rosalind J. Dworkin

&NA; Fifty‐seven women with breast cancer completed measures of family adaptability and cohesion, marital adjustment, and psychosocial adjustment to illness. Using a circumplex model of family systems, we examined whether subjects who perceived their families at moderate levels of cohesion and adaptability reported better psychosocial adjustment than subjects from families with extreme levels of cohesion and adaptability. The results indicated that the patients who reported the best adjustment to breast cancer and in their marriages, also reported the highest levels of family cohesion. There was not a significant relationship between adjustment to illness and adaptability. The implications for the treatment of women with breast cancer and for the families of these patients were discussed.


Addictive Behaviors | 1995

Influence of family disharmony and parental alcohol use on adolescent social skills, self-efficacy, and alcohol use.

John A. Webb; Paul E. Baer

Deficits in social skills have been found to be related to adolescent substance use. Little effort has been devoted to understanding how family factors influence the acquisition of these skills. This study examined the manner in which family disharmony and parental alcohol use affect adolescent alcohol use through their influence on the acquisition of social skills and self-efficacy regarding ones ability to utilize these skills. It was hypothesized that family disharmony and parental alcohol use directly influenced usage and affected usage indirectly through their influence on acquisition of social skills. Social skills were also hypothesized to affect usage directly and to affect usage indirectly by influencing beliefs regarding ones ability to implement these skills. Results indicated that family disharmony was directly related to adolescent alcohol use and social skills. Parental alcohol use was related only to adolescent usages, not to social skills. Social skills were related to self-efficacy, which was related to alcohol use but was not directly related to usage. Results are discussed in terms of the importance of family influences on adolescent alcohol use, the importance of including families in prevention efforts, and the importance of the acquisition of self-efficacy relative to social skills.


Pain | 1991

Situational and psychophysiological factors in psychologically induced pain

Timothy L. Bayer; Paul E. Baer; Charles Early

&NA; To investigate pain that occurs in the absence of painful stimulation, normal subjects were connected to a sham stimulator and were told that a headache could occur as a result of the electrical current they would receive. Half of the subjects who received this suggestion reported pain. The frequency and intensity of pain reports in a group which was given prior pain experience as a reference point in reporting pain and in a group which was exposed to a manipulation designed to reduce intentional deception were not significantly different from the pain reports of a group not exposed to these manipulations. The frequency of pain reports in subjects not connected to the sham stimulator but still asked to report pain was 25% which was significantly less than the frequency for subjects who were told there would be stimulation to the head. Pain ratings increased as the settings of the sham stimulator were increased. Subjects who reported pain had significantly fewer electrodermal responses to tones signaling them to prepare for a reaction time task. The results suggest that pain can be produced in the absence of peripheral stimulation. The pain does not appear to be due to intentional deception or the lack of a standard for comparison, but is strongly influenced by environmental cues. Psychophysiologically, pain responders were less attentive to signal stimuli.


American Journal of Psychology | 1969

Cognitive processes in differential GSR conditioning: effects of a masking task.

Marcus J. Fuhrer; Paul E. Baer

associated with verbalized recognition of the CS-UCS contingencies.1 In these studies, conditional GSR differentiation was acquired only by Ss who could accurately verbalize the stimulus relations during either intertrial verbal reports or postconditioning interviews. A similar relationship between knowledge of stimulus relations and acquisition of classically conditioned responses has also been demonstrated by studies involving informative preparatory instructions: Verbal description of the stimulus contingencies prior to conditioning has been shown to facilitate acquisition of conditional GSRs,2 heart rate,3 and eye blinks.4 It follows that acquisition of


Memory & Cognition | 1982

Cognitive factors in the concurrent differential conditioning of eyelid and skin conductance responses

Paul E. Baer; Marcus J. Fuhrer

The objectives of the study were to (1) determine if differential conditioning of eyelid responses ocurs only among subjects who accurately report knowledge of the CS-UCS relations, (2) assess whether differentially conditioned eyelid responding occurs only after the initial accurate interrial report, and (3) explore characteristics of differentially conditioned skin conductance responses (SCRs) obtained in an eyelid conditioning paradigm, with special attention to whether eyelid and SCR conditioning are similarly related to the subjects’ knowledge of the stimulus relations. Fifty-one male subjects were administered 80 differential eyelid conditioning trials, the CSs consisting of the 1,200-msec illumination of slides containing either grammatically correct or grammatically incorrect phrases. Significant differential SCR and eyelid conditioning was obtained for both V- and C-form eyelid responders, but only for subjects who accurately reported the CS-UCS relations. The initial appearance of SCR and eyelid differentiation was related within the trial sequence to subjects’ recognition of the stimulus relations. Eyelid and SCR conditioning were related similarly to knowledge of the stimulus relations, the exception being that subjects who recognized the stimulus relations late in the trial sequence did not develop reliable eyelid differentiation.


Journal of Behavioral Medicine | 1989

Attitudes to cancer: Psychometric properties of fighting spirit and denial

David V. Nelson; Lois C. Friedman; Paul E. Baer; Montague Lane; Frank E. Smith

Higher rates of recurrence-free survival at 5- and 10-year follow-up have been reported for breat cancer patients who initially responded to cancer with attitudes of “fighting spirit” or denial. We report here a factor analytic attempt, utilizing questionnaire data, to objectify these attitudes. A reliable factor structure replicated in breast and mixed cancer samples, yielding three factors: (1) Fighting Spirit or belief in the ability to fight back, conquer, and recover from cancer; (2) Information-Seeking behavior; and (3) Denial. Adequate 1-month test-retest correlations were obtained for Fighting Spirit and Information Seeking factor scores. A pattern of differential correlations with other measures (affect, coping, and optimism) distinguished Fighting Spirit and Information Seeking. The Denial factor appeared to be less stable and did not correlate significantly with other measures.


Journal of Behavioral Medicine | 1994

Subtypes of Psychosocial Adjustment to breast cancer

David V. Nelson; Lois C. Friedman; Paul E. Baer; Montague Lane; Frank E. Smith

By means of cluster analytic techniques, four subtypes of psychosocial adjustment were identified in a sample of 122 breast cancer patients who completed the Psychosocial Adjustment to Illness Scale. Internal consistency and internal validity of the derived typology were suggested by the finding that two different hierarchical agglomerative clustering methods (average linkage between groups, Wards) produced similar solutions. Three of the derived subtypes reported normal affect levels but different patterns of relative strengths and dysfunctions, while the fourth subtype appeared to be highly distressed and globally maladjusted. External validation was demonstrated by differentiating the subtypes on variables of negative affect, avoidance coping, and fighting spirit. The clinical and heuristic implications of these findings are discussed. The findings highlight the need for comprehensive assessment of psychosocial functioning of cancer patients. They demonstrate that even non-emotionally distressed patients can have very different profiles of adjustment and may benefit from correspondingly individually tailored psychosocial interventions.


Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry | 1977

Self-directed termination of excessive cigarette use among untreated smokers

Paul E. Baer; John P. Foreyt; Susan Wright

Abstract Fifty one letters from formerly long-term severely dependent cigarette smokers were analyzed for factors and procedures they thought to have been effective for termination of smoking. All respondents had stopped smoking without professional help. Most respondents used multiple techniques, but there was no systematic clustering of these methods.

Collaboration


Dive into the Paul E. Baer's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

John A. Webb

Baylor College of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

David V. Nelson

University of Texas at Austin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Marcus J. Fuhrer

Baylor College of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lois C. Friedman

Baylor College of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Frank E. Smith

Baylor College of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Montague Lane

Baylor College of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alex D. Pokorny

Baylor College of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Charlene D. Caid

Baylor College of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge