OPR seeks to build on its long history of distinguished demographic research by achieving the following: to foster interdisciplinary collaboration among population researchers at Princeton and other institutions; to promote the development of young scientists and the creation of opportunities for collaboration across ranks and disciplines; to develop new methods and data for population research; to incorporate new knowledge from allied fields into demographic research and expanding the array of topics investigated by population scientists; and to disseminate data, methods, and resources developed at OPR to population researchers throughout the nation and the world. Research at OPR is now characterized by six research areas: (1) biosocial interactions, (2) health and wellbeing, (3) migration and development, (4) children and families, (5) education and stratification, and (6) data and methods. Each element of the core infrastructure program will advance the quality, productivity, and innovation of OPR's research activities. The Administrative Core will support intellectual interaction through the Notestein Seminar Series and will support individual research associates primarily by providing vital services, including grant preparation and management. The Scientific Core consists of three components: The Computing Core, The Statistics Core and The Information Core. The Computing and Statistics Cores will support individual research by maintaining a state-of-the-art computing infrastructure, by providing statistical and econometric consulting, and by increasing access to data sources. These Cores will also offer technical training and workshops for OPR associates, researchers, students and postdoctoral fellows. The Information Core will support individual research associates by helping them identify and retrieve scholarly publications and data and will support the entire population community by continuing to build and maintain the Ansley J. Coale Population Research Collection in the Donald E. Stokes Library, the largest demography library in the world. The Development Core will promote interdisciplinary research and foster an intellectual community. The Public Infrastructure Core seeks to disseminate OPR-managed datasets to population researchers throughout the world, to produce Research Briefs that describe findings from the Fragile Families Study to a general audience, to edit and disseminate the journal of The Future of Children, and to maintain the Emergency Contraception Website.
As demographic research expands worldwide, OPR research focuses have been modified to accommodate this changing research environment. These modifications are reflected in the addition of a new research area, biosocial interactions. Associates continue to research: health and wellbeing, migration and development, children and families, education and stratification, and data and methods but have expanded to now include biosocial interactions. This newest research area focuses on the interplay between social and biological processes. Given this broad range of research, our work relates to social, economic, and environmental determinants of health at different stages of the life cycle. Within this broader field, OPR researchers have been examining biological linkages among socioeconomic factors, psychosocial factors, stress and health.
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Pons-Salort, Margarita; Oberste, M Steven; Pallansch, Mark A et al. (2018) The seasonality of nonpolio enteroviruses in the United States: Patterns and drivers. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 115:3078-3083 |
Andrasfay, Theresa (2018) Reproductive Health-Care Utilization of Young Adults Insured as Dependents. J Adolesc Health 62:570-576 |
Steil, Justin P; Albright, Len; Rugh, Jacob S et al. (2018) The Social Structure of Mortgage Discrimination. Hous Stud 33:759-776 |
Goldman, Noreen; Glei, Dana A; Weinstein, Maxine (2018) Declining mental health among disadvantaged Americans. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 115:7290-7295 |
Goldlust, Sandra M; Thuan, Phung Duc; Giang, Dang Duy Hoang et al. (2018) The decline of malaria in Vietnam, 1991-2014. Malar J 17:226 |
Winter, A K; Pramanik, S; Lessler, J et al. (2018) Rubella vaccination in India: identifying broad consequences of vaccine introduction and key knowledge gaps. Epidemiol Infect 146:65-77 |
Conley, Dalton; Johnson, Rebecca; Domingue, Ben et al. (2018) A sibling method for identifying vQTLs. PLoS One 13:e0194541 |
Clemens, Michael A; Lewis, Ethan G; Postel, Hannah M (2018) Immigration Restrictions as Active Labor Market Policy: Evidence from the Mexican Bracero Exclusion. Am Econ Rev 108:1468-1487 |
Edelman, Alison; Trussell, James; Aiken, Abigail R A et al. (2018) The emerging role of obesity in short-acting hormonal contraceptive effectiveness. Contraception 97:371-377 |
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