Jerry J. Mayo Data-verified

Affiliation confirmed via AI analysis of OpenAlex, ORCID, and web sources.

Researcher

Last publication 2025 Last refreshed 2026-05-16

faculty

7 h-index 31 pubs 293 cited

Biography and Research Information

OverviewAI-generated summary

Jerry J. Mayo's research investigates the physiological effects of dietary supplements and specific diets on exercise performance and body composition. His work has explored the impact of creatine, citrulline malate, and ketogenic diets in various populations, including healthy young adults, athletes, and overweight college students.

Maya has published on topics such as creatine for exercise and sports performance, with considerations for recovery. His studies have also examined the acute effects of supplements like citrulline malate on anaerobic capacity and the influence of ketogenic diets on performance in exercise-trained women. Additionally, he has investigated the role of exogenous ketone supplementation in appetite regulation among overweight college students.

Mayo's scholarly contributions include 31 publications, with an h-index of 7 and 278 citations. He has collaborated with researchers at the University of Central Arkansas, including Lauren M. Meek, Adam J. Bruenger, and Brittany R. Allman-Tucker, on shared publications.

Metrics

  • h-index: 7
  • Publications: 31
  • Citations: 293

Selected Publications

  • The Effect Of The Ketogenic Diet And Resistance Training On Performance In Exercise-Trained Women (2025)
  • Exogenous Ketone Supplementation Does Not Reduce Appetite in Overweight College Students (2023)
  • Acute Citrulline Malate Supplementation Does Not Improve Anaerobic Capacity in Healthy Young Adults: A Pilot Study (2023)
    1 citation DOI OpenAlex
  • Creatine for Exercise and Sports Performance, with Recovery Considerations for Healthy Populations (2021)
    142 citations DOI OpenAlex

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Collaboration Network

16 Collaborators 9 Institutions 1 Country

Top Collaborators

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