“…The AHAB project provides a registry of behavioral and biological measurements on midlife community volunteers recruited via mass-mail solicitation from communities of southwestern Pennsylvania (principally Allegheny County). Registry data include sociodemographic measurements; indices of personality and temperament; psychiatric history and symptomatology; aspects of social and cognitive functioning (e.g, social networks, cognitive abilities); health-impairing attributes of habit and lifestyle; physiological measurements germane to cardiovascular, autonomic, metabolic, immune, and central nervous system functioning; and DNA extracted for the study of genetic variation associated with registry phenotypes (Cf., Bleil, Gianaros, Jennings, Flory & Manuck, 2008; Halder, Muldoon, Ferrell & Manuck, 2007; Halder, Marsland, Cheong, Muldoon, Ferrell & Manuck, 2010; Hall, Muldoon, Jennings, Buyssee, Flory & Manuck, 2008; Manuck, Phillips, Gianaros, Flory & Muldoon, 2010). AHAB participants were 30–54 years of age, with no clinical history of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease, chronic kidney or liver disease, cancer treatment within the preceding year, or major neurologic disorders, schizophrenia, or other psychotic illness.…”