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Nan Zhao
Researcher at Chinese Academy of Sciences
Publications - 37
Citations - 2004
Nan Zhao is an academic researcher from Chinese Academy of Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Personality. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 29 publications receiving 1234 citations. Previous affiliations of Nan Zhao include Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
The Impact of COVID-19 Epidemic Declaration on Psychological Consequences: A Study on Active Weibo Users.
TL;DR: The results showed that negative emotions and sensitivity to social risks increased, while the scores of positive emotions and life satisfaction decreased, and people were concerned more about their health and family, while less about leisure and friends.
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An investigation of the relationship between the driving behavior questionnaire and objective measures of highway driving behavior
Nan Zhao,Nan Zhao,Bruce Mehler,Bryan Reimer,Lisa A. D'Ambrosio,Alea Mehler,Joseph F. Coughlin +6 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focused on the relationship between DBQ subscales and observed highway driving behaviors and found that drivers with high violations scores drove faster, had poorer lateral control, changed lanes more frequently, spent more time in the left lane, and had more sudden unidirectional accelerations.
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Self-reported and observed risky driving behaviors among frequent and infrequent cell phone users
TL;DR: Individuals who reported frequently using cell phones while driving were found to drive faster, change lanes more frequently, spend more time in the left lane, and engage in more instances of hard braking and high acceleration events.
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Evaluating the Validity of Simplified Chinese Version of LIWC in Detecting Psychological Expressions in Short Texts on Social Network Services
TL;DR: Primary evidence of validity of SCLIWC, as well as the proper way of using it efficiently on SNS short texts are provided.
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Brief report: examining driving behavior in young adults with high functioning autism spectrum disorders: a pilot study using a driving simulation paradigm.
Bryan Reimer,Ronna Fried,Bruce Mehler,Gagan Joshi,Anela Bolfek,Kathryn M. Godfrey,Nan Zhao,Rachel L. Goldin,Joseph Biederman +8 more
TL;DR: The high functioning ASD participants displayed a nominally higher and unvaried heart rate compared to controls and showed a gaze pattern suggestive of a diversion of visual attention away from high stimulus areas of the roadway that appears worthy of further study.