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Seth J. Schwartz

Researcher at University of Texas at Austin

Publications -  429
Citations -  26838

Seth J. Schwartz is an academic researcher from University of Texas at Austin. The author has contributed to research in topics: Identity (social science) & Acculturation. The author has an hindex of 80, co-authored 395 publications receiving 23215 citations. Previous affiliations of Seth J. Schwartz include University of Miami & Florida International University.

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Book ChapterDOI

Introduction: Toward an Integrative View of Identity

TL;DR: The authors discuss some key points of division within the existing literature on identity: identity viewed primarily as a personal, relational, or collective phenomenon, identity viewed as relatively stable, or as fluid and constantly changing.
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On the progression and stability of adolescent identity formation: a five-wave longitudinal study in early-to-middle and middle-to-late adolescence.

TL;DR: Systematic evidence for identity progression was found: the number of diffusions, moratoriums, and searching moratoriums (a newly obtained status) decreased, whereas the representation of the high-commitment statuses increased.
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Testing Berry's model of acculturation: A confirmatory latent class approach.

TL;DR: The authors examined the extent to which Berry's (1997) acculturation orientation categories--assimilation, integration, separation, and marginalization--would emerge from a latent class analysis of continuous accULTuration indices, and found mixed support for Berry's model.
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Efficacy of brief strategic family therapy in modifying Hispanic adolescent behavior problems and substance use.

TL;DR: Results showed that, compared to GC cases, BSFT cases showed significantly greater pre- to post-intervention improvement in parent reports of adolescent conduct problems and delinquency, adolescent reports of marijuana use, and observer ratings and self reports of family functioning.
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Beyond the 'east-west' dichotomy: Global variation in cultural models of selfhood.

Vivian L. Vignoles, +71 more
TL;DR: A new 7-dimensional model of self-reported ways of being independent or interdependent is developed and validated across cultures and will allow future researchers to test more accurately the implications of cultural models of selfhood for psychological processes in diverse ecocultural contexts.