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AIDS Care
Psychological and Socio-medical Aspects of AIDS/HIV
Volume 28, 2016 - Issue 1
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Original Articles

Disparities in attention to HIV-prevention information

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Pages 79-86 | Received 03 Sep 2014, Accepted 23 Jun 2015, Published online: 17 Aug 2015

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Read on this site (2)

Neil A. Lewis$suffix/text()$suffix/text(), Daniel G. Kougias, Koji J. Takahashi & Allison Earl. (2021) The Behavior of Same-Race Others and Its Effects on Black Patients’ Attention to Publicly Presented HIV-Prevention Information. Health Communication 36:10, pages 1252-1259.
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Mary Spink Neumann, Aaron Plant, Andrew D. Margolis & Stephen A. Flores. (2020) Observed reactions among patients attending HIV treatment facilities to a brief video intervention on treatment initiation and adherence. AIDS Care 32:5, pages 656-665.
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Articles from other publishers (6)

Veronica Derricks & Allison Earl. (2023) Too close for comfort: leveraging identity-based relevance through targeted health information backfires for Black Americans. Journal of Communication.
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William Hart, Kyle Richardson, Gregory K. Tortoriello & Allison Earl. (2019) ‘You Are What You Read:’ Is selective exposure a way people tell us who they are?. British Journal of Psychology 111:3, pages 417-442.
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Koji J. Takahashi & Allison Earl. (2019) Effect of Extraneous Affect on Health Message Reception. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin 46:2, pages 270-284.
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Veronica Derricks & Allison Earl. (2019) Information Targeting Increases the Weight of Stigma: Leveraging Relevance Backfires When People Feel Judged. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology 82, pages 277-293.
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Allison Earl & Neil A. LewisJrJr. (2019) Health in context: New perspectives on healthy thinking and healthy living. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology 81, pages 1-3.
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Izzy Gainsburg & Allison Earl. (2018) Trigger warnings as an interpersonal emotion-regulation tool: Avoidance, attention, and affect depend on beliefs. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology 79, pages 252-263.
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