Profiles

Keywords
Last Name
Institution

Connection

Search Results to Stephanie J. Crowley

This is a "connection" page, showing the details of why an item matched the keywords from your search.

                     
                     

One or more keywords matched the following items that are connected to Crowley, Stephanie

Item TypeName
Concept Time Factors
Academic Article Preflight adjustment to eastward travel: 3 days of advancing sleep with and without morning bright light.
Academic Article Complete or partial circadian re-entrainment improves performance, alertness, and mood during night-shift work.
Academic Article Circadian phase determined from melatonin profiles is reproducible after 1 wk in subjects who sleep later on weekends.
Academic Article Morning melatonin has limited benefit as a soporific for daytime sleep after night work.
Academic Article Melatonin in the afternoons of a gradually advancing sleep schedule enhances the circadian rhythm phase advance.
Academic Article The relationship between breakfast skipping, chronotype, and glycemic control in type 2 diabetes.
Academic Article Phase advancing human circadian rhythms with morning bright light, afternoon melatonin, and gradually shifted sleep: can we reduce morning bright-light duration?
Academic Article Relationships among sleep timing, sleep duration and glycemic control in Type 2 diabetes in Thailand.
Academic Article Circadian rhythms of European and African-Americans after a large delay of sleep as in jet lag and night work.
Academic Article Sex and ancestry determine the free-running circadian period.
Academic Article Night-shift work is associated with poorer glycaemic control in patients with type 2 diabetes.
Academic Article Estimating the dim light melatonin onset of adolescents within a 6-h sampling window: the impact of sampling rate and threshold method.
Academic Article A longitudinal assessment of sleep timing, circadian phase, and phase angle of entrainment across human adolescence.
Academic Article Associations between self-reported sleep duration and cardiometabolic risk factors in young African-origin adults from the five-country modeling the epidemiologic transition study (METS).

Search Criteria
  • Time Factors