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Change in Human Social Behavior in Response to a Common Vaccine CHRIS REIBER, PHD, MPH, ERIC C. SHATTUCK, MS, SEAN FIORE, MS, PAULINE ALPERIN, MS, VANESSA DAVIS, MS, AND JANICE MOORE, PHD
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Document Date: 2010-10-14 18:20:30


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City

Philadelphia / Vestal / Brisbane / New York / /

Company

Oxford University Press / Plenum Press / Sobell LC / Ó 2010 Elsevier Inc. / Humana Press / /

Country

Uruguay / /

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Facility

Colorado State University / EvoS Institute / Coordinating Center / Binghamton University / Fort Collins / /

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MedicalCondition

therefore used influenza / flu / Seasonal influenza / rabies / experimental infection / natural infection / wildtype infection / such infections / human infection / sickness / wild-type influenza infection / actual infection / Inapparent infections / diseases / behavioral fever / cholera / flu virus / infection / wild-type infection / infectious illnesses / influenza virus / full-fledged sickness / illness / MS / infections / infectious disease / Influenza / human influenza / human disease / /

MedicalTreatment

immunization / immunizations / vaccination / /

Organization

EvoS Institute for Advanced Studies / Human Subjects Research Review Committee / United States Center for Disease Control / Colorado State University / Binghamton University / Department of Biology / Coordinating Center for Infectious Diseases / Oxford University / Department of Anthropology / /

Person

SEAN FIORE / VANESSA DAVIS / Ann Epidemiol / ERIC C. SHATTUCK / PAULINE ALPERIN / CHRIS REIBER / JANICE MOORE / /

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Position

King / representative / /

ProvinceOrState

Florida / New York / /

URL

http /

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