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  • Faculty of Science
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  • Research Publications and Outputs
  • Recent submissions
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Research Publications and Outputs: Recent submissions

    • The Double Bind of Communicating About Zoonotic Origins: Describing Exotic Animal Sources of COVID‐19 Increases Both Healthy and Discriminatory Avoidance Intentions 

      LaCour, Mark; Hughes, Brent; Goldwater, Micah; Ireland, Molly; Worthy, Darrell; Van Allen, Jason; Gaylord, Nick; Van‐Hoosier, Garrett; Davis, Tyler
      Published 2021
      Many novel diseases are of zoonotic origin, likely including COVID-19. Describing diseases as originating from a diverse range of animals is known to increase risk perceptions and intentions to engage in preventative ...
      Article
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    • The effect of COVID19 pandemic restrictions on an urban rodent population 

      Bedoya-Prez, Miguel A.; Ward, Michael P.; Loomes, Max; McGregor, Iain S.; Crowther, Mathew S.
      Published 2021
      Shortly after the enactment of restrictions aimed at limiting the spread of COVID-19, various local government and public health authorities around the world reported an increased sighting of rats. Such reports have yet ...
      Article
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    • Maintaining Momentum in Infant Mental Health Research During COVID-19: Adapting Observational Assessments 

      Tesson, Stephanie; Swinsburg, Dianne; Kasparian, Nadine A
      Published 2021
      Understanding the potential effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on the developing parent-infant relationship is a priority, especially for medically-fragile infants and their caregivers who face distinct challenges and ...
      Article
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    • A Long Way to Go Understanding the Role of Chaplaincy? A Critical Reflection on the Findings of the Survey Examining Chaplaincy Responses to Covid-19 

      Best, Megan; Rajaee, Geila; Vandenhoeck, Anne
      Published 2021
      This contribution reflects on some of the most prominent findings in the survey on the chaplaincy response to the COVID-19 pandemic. The finding that chaplain respondents had difficulty understanding their own role prior ...
      Article
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    • Morphological preview effects in English are restricted to suffixed words 

      Dann, Kelly
      Published 2021
      Much of the evidence for morphological decomposition accounts of complex word identification has relied on the masked-priming paradigm. However, morphologically complex words are typically encountered in sentence contexts ...
      Open Access
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