Kharah M Ross: h-index, Total Citations, and Citation Map
Kharah M Ross's h-index is 25 (42 i10-index, 1,960+ total citations across 5+ publications) according to Google Scholar as of May 2026. Kharah M Ross is affiliated with Associate Professor, Psychology, Athabasca University.
Kharah M Ross is a researcher affiliated with Associate Professor, Psychology, Athabasca University, specializing in various fields. Their work has been cited 1,960 times. This profile visualizes their global influence, highlighting strong citation networks in United States.
Kharah M Ross's Citation Metrics
Bibliometric impact based on 5 indexed publications.
- H-Index
- 25
- i10-Index
- 42
- Total Citations
- 1,960
- Citing Countries
- 11
As of May 2026.
Kharah M Ross has an h-index of 25 and 1,960 total citations across 5 publications, with research cited by institutions in 11 countries.
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Top Cited Works
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How stable are diurnal cortisol activity indices in healthy individuals? Evidence from three multi-wave studies
2014202
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Visa Evidence Package
Views and exports tuned for EB-1A, O-1A, and EB-2 NIW petitions. Sustained acclaim, geographic reach, and independent-citation filtering are the strongest evidence categories immigration adjudicators look for.
Significant Contributions
Auto-detected research lines — a seminal paper and the follow-up work building on it. Review and edit before using in a petition. Each Free PDF opens in a new tab — EB-1A organises this into the structure USCIS applies to Criterion 5 of 8 CFR § 204.5(h)(3)(v); EB-1B re-frames it under § 204.5(i)(3) (outstanding researcher); NIW presents it under prong 2 of Matter of Dhanasar.
The researcher established foundational evidence on the stability of diurnal cortisol indices in healthy individuals through rigorous multi-wave studies published in a leading endocrinology journal.
The researcher empirically tested the biological embedding hypothesis, establishing a link between early life adversity and later proinflammatory phenotypes in a highly cited developmental psychopathology study.
The researcher demonstrated that early-life socioeconomic disadvantage, rather than current status, predicts accelerated epigenetic aging of monocytes, establishing a critical link between childhood adversity and biological aging.
Citation trend (last 10 years)Click to expand
Citation Trend (Last 10 Years)
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