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1 el whose population is largely rightwing and religious.
2 these: the economic, the political, and the religious.
3 nt reported that they were spiritual but not religious.
6 fers consequences of discrimination based on religious affiliation, controlling for potentially confo
7 specific racial/ethnic minority or minority religious affiliations were less likely to participate i
9 re entirely objective, devoid of polemics or religious allusions, and address evolutionary questions
12 elatin-based products is required to address religious and cultural concerns, because porcine and bov
13 care must be validated, taking into account religious and cultural differences, as well as variabili
14 xperiments seem to arbitrarily depend on the religious and economic interests of the administration.
15 pecies is important not only for economical, religious and health reasons, but also, it is important
16 at more people identify as spiritual but not religious and more people are not attending religious se
18 tion and the ensuing cultural divide between religious and nonreligious societies and subcultures.
19 hear more persistent music, which was often religious and patriotic compared to those with a structu
22 es including: sexual orientation, ethnicity, religious and political views, personality traits, intel
28 ly reported activities related to supporting religious and spiritual needs (>/= 90%) and providing su
30 for Christian church leaders on scientific, religious, and cultural aspects of male circumcision (in
31 to be married, richer, better educated, more religious, and healthier, all of which have well-documen
33 d modern cooking-fuels access) and cultural, religious, and social factors explain more detailed emis
34 ; 2) forbidden thoughts: aggression, sexual, religious, and somatic obsessions and checking compulsio
35 Physicians who were male, those who were religious, and those who had personal objections to mora
37 ng donor autonomy, external reassurance, and religious approval), needing social support (avoiding fa
39 slam has been debated for decades, with most religious authorities sanctioning both living-organ and
42 alysis reveals 3 psychological dimensions of religious belief (God's perceived level of involvement,
44 in demonstrating that specific components of religious belief are mediated by well-known brain networ
45 uments on mentalizing, cognitive biases, and religious belief is currently not as strong as the write
48 ore important than the particular content of religious belief to the initial rise of social complexit
49 temporary psychological theories that ground religious belief within evolutionary adaptive cognitive
50 lah (God), who is the ultimate arbitrator of religious belief, changes the relative value of Jewish I
51 te bottom-up perceptual processes in shaping religious belief, suggesting that individual differences
55 /weekend shifts and more often by those with religious beliefs (odds ratio, 1.05; 95% CI, 1.01-1.08;
59 explain how a package of culturally evolved religious beliefs and practices characterized by increas
60 thesis is grounded in the idea that although religious beliefs and practices originally arose as nona
62 h evidence supports the idea that particular religious beliefs and ritual forms can galvanize social
63 When a link was found between individuals' religious beliefs and uptake, findings indicated that mi
64 tion, we suggest that failure to acknowledge religious beliefs as motivationally causal for suicide t
65 me reluctance to donate based on cultural or religious beliefs especially offends principles of liber
67 prosociality, this is the first study to tie religious beliefs to large-scale cross-national trends i
70 ucts (e.g., strong but nonmoral attitudes or religious beliefs), are perceived as universally and obj
71 teeming with breathtaking theodiversity--in religious beliefs, behaviors, and traditions, as well as
75 aks sharply online during major cultural and religious celebrations, regardless of hemisphere locatio
77 rom tensions of the day to singing, dancing, religious ceremonies, and enthralling stories, often abo
78 rigins and their own particular cultural and religious characteristics-North African Muslims and Seph
79 itically driven commitment, people with high religious commitment may be particularly prone to mechan
82 tients' spiritual needs are not supported by religious communities or the medical system, and spiritu
83 were minimally or not at all supported by a religious community, and 72% reported that their spiritu
88 these proportions attest to a high level of religious conversion (whether voluntary or enforced), dr
91 ation (AOR, 1.26; 95% CI, 1.06 to 1.49), and religious coping (AOR, 4.79; 95% CI, 1.40 to 16.42) were
92 ctors significantly associated with positive religious coping and any end-of-life outcome at P < .05
93 ity, such as intrinsic religiosity, positive religious coping and one related to following Islamic et
95 ttle is known about the associations between religious coping and the use of intensive life-prolongin
102 e proxy/durable power of attorney), positive religious coping remained a significant predictor of rec
105 y can promote mental health through positive religious coping, community and support, and positive be
106 maging to mental health by means of negative religious coping, misunderstanding and miscommunication,
112 ligent design (ID)-the latest incarnation of religious creationism-posits that complex biological fea
113 ntrol resources ("strength"), we submit that religious cues make people feel observed, giving them "r
114 extensive bioweapons program and a Japanese religious cult sought to launch an anthrax attack on Tok
115 e sensitive nature of MITS inevitably evokes religious, cultural, and ethical questions influencing t
118 al psychology, but contend that we need more religious diversity and methodological diversity as well
119 es the evolution of human cooperation, ethno-religious diversity has been considered to obstruct it,
120 gy, and discuss three cultural dimensions of religious diversity in relation to psychological process
121 of belief are possible and advantageous when religious diversity starts interacting with coalitional
126 documented almost exclusively among politico-religious elites(4)-specifically within polygynous and p
128 iations between area-level constructs of the religious environment (e.g., denomination-specific churc
129 o points of interest such as restaurants and religious establishments, connecting 56,945 census block
133 ning vaccine, 1 (2%) was unvaccinated due to religious exemption, and 1 (2%) had unknown vaccination
134 nsent to conduct the MITS procedure involves religious factors associated with timing of burial, use
141 gal pitfalls related to the First Amendment (religious freedom), Eighth Amendment (cruel and unusual
142 a clear correlation between affiliation to a religious group and better outcomes in terms of mental a
143 an enigmatic Eastern Orthodox Old Believers religious group relocated to Siberia in seventeenth cent
146 likely to participate in Christian or Muslim religious groups and rituals, even several years after t
147 n's ability to foster social cohesion within religious groups has been a key factor in the human tran
148 and uptake, findings indicated that minority religious groups tended to have lower probabilities of u
152 cardinal health-care processes; cultural and religious histories that respect and revere scholarship,
154 es whether Catholic hospitals disclose their religious identity and health care practices based on th
155 liefs are correlated with both political and religious identity for stem cell research, the Big Bang,
156 h must also include the cultural, political, religious/ideological, and social-organizational factors
159 driven by historical episodes of social and religious intolerance, that ultimately led to the integr
160 tual analyses are needed to move research in religious involvement and mortality to the next level.
162 dge Test living donation subscale, R3KT) and religious (Islamic Knowledge of Living Organ Donation, I
165 erceived emotion, and doctrinal/experiential religious knowledge), which functional MRI localizes wit
166 e did a study to establish whether educating religious leaders about male circumcision would increase
167 we think that the process of working through religious leaders can serve as an innovative model to pr
170 d hunter-gatherers, likely characterized the religious lives of many ancestral humans, and is often p
171 potential demands an increased awareness of religious matters by practitioners in the mental health
172 with women who never or almost never attend religious meetings or services, women attending less tha
173 ound in all human cultures and is central to religious, military, and political activities, which req
175 of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) attacked the Yazidi religious minority living in the area of Mount Sinjar in
176 ssociations between prenatal exposure to the religious month of Ramadan and body anthropometry among
178 he procedure is in tension with cultural and religious norms in many of the countries where CHAMPS wo
179 arital status (SHR [95% CI]: 0.6 [0.4-0.9]), religious objection to LDKT (SHR [95% CI]: 0.6 [0.4-1.0]
180 racism and discrimination, medical mistrust, religious objections to living donor KT), psychosocial c
183 ation exceptions (accommodation states where religious or moral beliefs must be taken into considerat
186 ol immunization requirements on the basis of religious or personal beliefs (ie, nonmedical exemptions
187 ad nonmedical exemptions (eg, exemptions for religious or philosophical reasons, as opposed to medica
188 s and vaccine risks, historical experiences, religious or political affiliations, and socioeconomic s
191 nd commercial interests as well as personal, religious, or cultural beliefs may conflict with disease
193 bjects (mean age = 87.9 years) from the Rush Religious Order Study (n = 491) and Memory and Aging Pro
194 , and MCI in 636 autopsied subjects from the Religious Order Study and the Rush Memory and Aging Proj
195 a available for deceased participants of the Religious Orders Study (n = 492) and the Rush Memory and
198 rom postmortem tissue obtained from the Rush Religious Orders Study (RROS) cases with a premortem cli
199 emistry data from 243 AD participants in the Religious Orders Study and Memory and Aging Project, we
200 d neuropathology data were acquired from the Religious Orders Study and Rush Memory and Aging Project
201 MCC-SP to analyze one real dataset from the Religious Orders Study and the Memory and Aging Project,
202 dementia from 2 cohort studies of aging, the Religious Orders Study and the Memory and Aging Project,
203 of one of two cohort studies of ageing (The Religious Orders Study and the Rush Memory and Aging Pro
204 al cohort studies of aging and dementia (the Religious Orders Study and the Rush Memory and Aging Pro
205 ed autopsy collection of 821 brains from the Religious Orders Study and the Rush Memory and Aging Pro
206 rt, including 725 deceased subjects from the Religious Orders Study and the Rush Memory and Aging Pro
207 Using 1709 subjects (697 deceased) from the Religious Orders Study and the Rush Memory and Aging Pro
208 included 483 autopsied participants from the Religious Orders Study and the Rush Memory and Aging Pro
209 More than 2,500 persons participating in the Religious Orders Study or the Memory and Aging Project a
210 jects in the Rush Alzheimer's Disease Center Religious Orders Study were analyzed for associations be
211 of aging (Rush Memory and Aging Project and Religious Orders Study) and had agreed to brain autopsy.
213 c studies, Rush Memory and Aging Project and Religious Orders Study, completed a mean of 7.5 annual e
214 al cohort studies of aging and dementia, the Religious Orders Study, which began in 1993, and the Rus
220 t of confounders, increased participation in religious organizations predicted a decline in depressiv
221 ted with younger age (p < 0.0001), not being religious (p = 0.001), having an HIV-positive stable par
223 female; mean age, 63) with greater levels of religious participation were more likely to be female an
224 , social network size, frequency of contact, religious participation, and participation in other soci
225 evious studies have linked suicide risk with religious participation, but the majority have used ecol
226 D event rates across self-reported levels of religious participation, prayer/meditation, and spiritua
228 ore research is needed on the collective and religious parts of the moral domain, such as loyalty, au
229 in a Belizean community showed that the most religious (pastors and church workers) reported more ill
233 of brain death criteria; racial, ethnic, and religious perspectives on organ donation; and physician
235 , the benefits of economic exchange increase religious pluralism and social interactions with out-gro
236 We find little evidence of political or religious polarization regarding nanotechnology and gene
239 ft from small foraging bands and their local religious practices and beliefs to large and complex gro
241 approach to demonstrate associations between religious practices early in the life course (regular se
242 approach to demonstrate associations between religious practices early in the life-course (regular se
244 ening our understanding of which elements of religious practices promote health (specifically, is it
246 Furthermore, we propose the hypothesis that religious practices that more strongly regulate female s
249 The target article develops an account of religious prosociality that is driven by increases in se
252 n of meat, dairy, and egg (MDE) products for religious purposes influences cardiometabolic health bio
253 h patients who refuse blood transfusions for religious reasons have provided valuable lessons and rai
254 atient requesting a bloodless transplant for religious reasons, and 2 cases arose from age discrimina
256 84% of the worldwide population, identify as religious, religion is arguably one prevalent facet of c
259 iously observed inverse correlations between religious service attendance and psychopathology during
260 ence consistently shows associations between religious service attendance and reduced mortality risk,
261 that might underlie the association between religious service attendance and reduced risk of mortali
262 pertensive women who provided information on religious service attendance and religious coping in the
264 were used to examine the association between religious service attendance and suicide, adjusting for
265 ars) on the likelihood of change in level of religious service attendance from childhood to adulthood
269 ts (marital status, social network size, and religious service attendance) showed the strongest prote
270 rolled for sociodemographic characteristics, religious service attendance, maternal attachment, and p
273 ate of suicide compared with never attending religious services (hazard ratio, 0.16; 95% CI, 0.06-0.4
275 protective association between attendance at religious services and depression, the extent to which t
276 y shown an association between attendance at religious services and lower all-cause mortality, but th
278 set MDE or no lifetime MDE to stop attending religious services by the time of the first adult follow
280 d in the Nurses' Health Study, attendance at religious services once per week or more was associated
281 together with other R/S variables, attending religious services several times per week was associated
283 or spirituality, frequency of attendance at religious services, and denomination (all participants w
285 y examine the possible relationships between religious social support systems and other dimensions of
286 t also suggests different ways of describing religious socialization and of viewing assertions about
287 aseline interviews assessed psychosocial and religious/spiritual measures, advance care planning, and
288 ous coping and self-identification as a very religious/spiritual person were associated with lower mo
289 t Christians value thoughts and prayers from religious strangers and priests, while atheists and agno
290 nd ventromedial frontal cortex, while sexual/religious symptoms had a specific influence on ventral s
295 however, that the United States may be more religious than can be accounted for by parasite-stress.
297 tuals that facilitate the standardization of religious traditions across large populations(25,26) gen
298 reported adherence to a wide array of world religious traditions including Christianity, Hinduism an
300 Valley, saw the emergence of highly similar religious traditions with an unprecedented emphasis on s