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Published online before print April 9, 2007, 10.1097/PSY.0b013e31803cb919
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Use of Social Words in Autobiographies and Longevity

Sarah D. Pressman, PhD and Sheldon Cohen, PhD

From the Department of Psychology (S.D.P, S.C.), Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.


Figure 17
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Figure 1. Association between the use of social roles in text (social ties score) and longevity (depicted in tertiles for visual purposes only) in Study 1 (psychologists).

 

Figure 27
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Figure 2. Association between the use of linguistic inquiry and word count (LIWC) social factors in text and longevity (depicted in tertiles for visual purposes only) in Study 1 (psychologists).

 

Figure 37
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Figure 3. Association between the number of social roles mentioned (top and bottom tertiles of social ties score) and survival in Study 2 (literary authors).

 

Figure 47
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Figure 4. Association between the number of social roles mentioned (top and bottom tertiles of social ties score) and survival in Study 1 (psychologists).

 





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Copyright © 2007 by the American Psychosomatic Society