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Arkun Tatar

Researcher at Haliç University

Publications -  38
Citations -  296

Arkun Tatar is an academic researcher from Haliç University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Personality & Personality Assessment Inventory. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 33 publications receiving 211 citations.

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Gözden geçirilmiş schutte duygusal zekâ ölçeğinin Türkçe’ye uyarlanması ve psikometrik özelliklerinin incelenmesi

TL;DR: In this paper, the Schutte Emotional Intelligence Scale (SES) was adapted into Turkish and the results indicated that the scale can be a reliable and valid instrument for Turkish population, but further studies are needed to examine factor structure of the scale.
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The adaptation of the CES-Depression scale into Turkish through the use of confirmatory factor analysis and item response theory and the examination of psychometric characteristics -

TL;DR: In this article, the authors adapted the CES-Depression scale into Turkish and investigated the psychometric characteristics of the scale and found that the scale discriminated between patient and non-patient groups effectively at 81.7%.
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The HEXACO–100 Across 16 Languages: A Large-Scale Test of Measurement Invariance

TL;DR: Results imply that the H EXACO–PI–R provides largely comparable measurement of the HEXACO dimensions, although the lack of scalar invariance highlights the necessity for future research clarifying the interpretation of mean-level trait differences across countries.
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The Relationship Among Personality, Cognitive Anxiety, Somatic Anxiety, Physiological Arousal, and Performance in Male Athletes

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the association between personality, competitive anxiety, somatic anxiety and physiological arousal in athletes with high and low anxiety levels, and concluded that an athlete's neurotic personality may influence his cognitive an...
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Analysis of the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CES-D) in Children and Adolescents from the Perspective of the Item Response Theory

TL;DR: This data indicates that depression is strikingly widespread among patients referred to primary health care services and the consequences of its impact are severe and unpredictable.