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PMC:7537225 / 30041-31185 JSONTXT

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LitCovid-PD-CLO

Id Subject Object Predicate Lexical cue
T118 611-612 http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/CLO_0001020 denotes a
T119 728-729 http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/CLO_0001020 denotes a

LitCovid-PubTator

Id Subject Object Predicate Lexical cue tao:has_database_id
95 89-95 Disease denotes Stress MESH:D000079225

LitCovid-sentences

Id Subject Object Predicate Lexical cue
T223 0-3 Sentence denotes H1.
T224 4-96 Sentence denotes The Number of People Together—Do People Living Alone Experience the Highest Level of Stress?
T225 97-99 Sentence denotes No
T226 100-379 Sentence denotes Even though almost half of our sample was stuck at home (46.1%), while 20.2 per cent lived alone, and 77.5 per cent stayed with one or more adults, we found very little evidence for the association between the number of adults and perceived stress levels (beyond marital status).
T227 380-570 Sentence denotes The results of our study contradict previous findings, which suggested that either living alone or having too many people around can negatively affect one’s well‐being (Fuller et al., 1996).
T228 571-747 Sentence denotes It is possible that living alone may be a preference for many people in our sample, and that they are able to provide for themselves and to pay the rent for a single apartment.
T229 748-886 Sentence denotes Many of those who live alone still maintain high levels of connections with their non‐household relatives or friends (De Vaus & Qu, 2015).
T230 887-1144 Sentence denotes Previous studies have shown that people use social media to connect with others (Kowal et al., 2020), and these valuable (and, most importantly, intentional) connections and interactions are not hindered by the current situation, as they can be kept online.