Vincent J. Carey
Brigham and Women's Hospital
278 Papers
1.8K Citations
Vincent J. Carey is an academic researcher from Brigham and Women's Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Bioconductor. The author has an hindex of 66, co-authored 260 publications. Previous affiliations of Vincent J. Carey include Boston University & Rush University Medical Center.
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Papers
Effects of High vs Low Glycemic Index of Dietary Carbohydrate on Cardiovascular Disease Risk Factors and Insulin Sensitivity The OmniCarb Randomized Clinical Trial
Frank M. Sacks,Frank M. Sacks,Vincent J. Carey,Cheryl A.M. Anderson,Cheryl A.M. Anderson,Edgar R. Miller,Trisha Copeland,Jeanne Charleston,Benjamin J. Harshfield,Nancy Laranjo,Phyllis McCarron,Janis F. Swain,Karen White,Karen Yee,Lawrence J. Appel +14 more
TL;DR: Using glycemic index to select specific foods may not improve cardiovascular risk factors or insulin resistance in the context of an overall DASH-type diet, according to this 5-week controlled feeding study.
Four Papers on Contemporary Software Design Strategies for Statistical Methodologists
Vincent J. Carey,Dianne Cook +1 more
TL;DR: The collection of papers published here, written by John Chambers, Duncan Temple Lang, Michael Lawrence, Martin Morgan, Yihui Xie, Heike Hofmann and Xiaoyue Cheng, shows how statistical software is adapting and changing.
Subtyping COPD by Using Visual and Quantitative CT Imaging Features.
Jinkyeong Park,Brian D. Hobbs,James D. Crapo,Barry J. Make,Elizabeth A. Regan,Stephen M. Humphries,Vincent J. Carey,David A. Lynch,Edwin K. Silverman +8 more
TL;DR: The combination of visual and quantitative CT features reflects different underlying pathological processes in the heterogeneous COPD syndrome and provides a useful approach to reclassify persons with COPD.
Cox regression models for intermediate events, with discharge from hospital as an example.
TL;DR: The role that discharge might have in risk for surgical infections after hernia repair operations, where follow-up continued for 1 month after operation, and 50% of infections occurred at home, is explored.
Factors influencing the infant gut microbiome at age 3-6 months: Findings from the ethnically diverse Vitamin D Antenatal Asthma Reduction Trial (VDAART)
Joanne E. Sordillo,Yanjiao Zhou,Michael J. McGeachie,John Ziniti,Nancy E. Lange,Nancy Laranjo,Jessica Rabe Savage,Vincent J. Carey,George T. O'Connor,Megan Sandel,Robert C. Strunk,Leonard B. Bacharier,Robert S. Zeiger,Scott T. Weiss,George M. Weinstock,Diane R. Gold,Augusto A. Litonjua +16 more
TL;DR: The findings presented here suggest that race, mode of delivery, breast‐feeding, and cord blood vitamin D levels are associated with infant gut microbiome composition, with possible long‐term implications for immune system modulation and asthma/allergic disease incidence.