Archive for August 2014
His and Hers: Economic Factors and Relationship Quality in Germany
Long-term symptomatic and functional outcome following an intensive inpatient multidisciplinary intervention for treatment-resistant affective disorders
Bullying Behaviour and Victimization Among Aboriginal Students within Northwestern Ontario
The psychological impacts of nostalgia for people with dementia: a randomised double-blind controlled experimental study
Food and Nutrition Assistance Research Database
Effects of a New Sports Companion on Received Social Support and Physical Exercise: An Intervention Study
Passionate men and rational women: gender contradictions in engineering
Greater fear reactivity and psychophysiological hyperactivity among infants with later conduct problems and callous-unemotional traits
Pregabalin for detoxification from opioids: a single case study
Relation of reading motivation to reading achievement in seventh-grade students from Kenya and the United States.
Sanders Rallies the South
Who’s Googled whom? Trainees’ Internet and online social networking experiences, behaviors, and attitudes with clients and supervisors.
Have Authoritarian Parenting Practices and Roles Changed in the Last 50 Years?
DISC1-TSNAX and DAOA genes in major depression and citalopram efficacy
Evaluation of a Coordinated School-Based Obesity Prevention Program in a Hispanic Community: Choosing Healthy and Active Lifestyles for Kids/Healthy Schools Healthy Families
Anxiety symptomatology and perceived health in African American adults: Moderating role of emotion regulation.
RAndomised controlled trial to imProve depressIon and the quality of life of people with Dementia using cognitive bias modification: RAPID study protocol
The Voting Rights Act of 1965: Background and Overview
The Voting Rights Act is a landmark federal law enacted in 1965 to remove race-based
restrictions on voting. It is perhaps the country’s most important voting rights law, with a history
that dates to the Civil War. After that conflict ended, a number of constitutional amendments were
adopted that addressed the particular circumstances of freed slaves, including the Fifteenth
Amendment that guaranteed the right to vote for all U.S. citizens regardless of “race, color, or
previous condition of servitude.”