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Dive into the research topics where Alan Meca is active.

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Featured researches published by Alan Meca.


Emerging adulthood | 2013

Identity in Emerging Adulthood Reviewing the Field and Looking Forward

Seth J. Schwartz; Byron L. Zamboanga; Koen Luyckx; Alan Meca; Rachel A. Ritchie

The present article presents a review of identity status-based theory and research with adolescents and emerging adults, with some coverage of related approaches such as narrative identity and identity style. In the first section, we review Erikson’s theory of identity and early identity status research examining differences in personality and cognitive variables across statuses. We then review two contemporary identity models that extend identity status theory and explicitly frame identity development as a dynamic and iterative process. We also review work that has focused on specific domains of identity. The second section of the article discusses mental and physical health correlates of identity processes and statuses. The article concludes with recommendations for future identity research with adolescent and emerging adult populations.


American Psychologist | 2016

The Role of Neuroscience Within Psychology: A Call for Inclusiveness Over Exclusiveness

Seth J. Schwartz; Scott O. Lilienfeld; Alan Meca; Katheryn C. Sauvigné

In the present article, we appraise the increasingly prominent role of neuroscience within psychology and offer cautions and recommendations regarding the future of psychology as a field. We contend that the conflict between eliminative reductionism (the belief that the neural level of analysis will eventually render the psychological level of analysis superfluous) and emergent properties (the assumption that higher-order mental functions are not directly reducible to neural processes) is critical if we are to identify the optimal role for neuroscience within psychology. We argue for an interdisciplinary future for psychology in which the considerable strengths of neuroscience complement and extend the strengths of other subfields of psychology. For this goal to be achieved, a balance must be struck between an increasing focus on neuroscience and the continued importance of other areas of psychology. We discuss the implications of the growing prominence of neuroscience for the broader profession of psychology, especially with respect to funding agency priorities, hiring practices in psychology departments, methodological rigor, and the training of future generations of students. We conclude with recommendations for advancing psychology as both a social science and a natural science. (PsycINFO Database Record


Journal of Personality | 2014

Meaning in Life in Emerging Adulthood: A Person‐Oriented Approach

Jessie Dezutter; Alan S. Waterman; Seth J. Schwartz; Koen Luyckx; Wim Beyers; Alan Meca; Su Yeong Kim; Susan Krauss Whitbourne; Byron L. Zamboanga; Richard M. Lee; Sam A. Hardy; Larry F. Forthun; Rachel A. Ritchie; Robert S. Weisskirch; Elissa J. Brown; S. Jean Caraway

The present study investigated naturally occurring profiles based on two dimensions of meaning in life: Presence of Meaning and Search for Meaning. Cluster analysis was used to examine meaning-in-life profiles, and subsequent analyses identified different patterns in psychosocial functioning for each profile. A sample of 8,492 American emerging adults (72.5% women) from 30 colleges and universities completed measures on meaning in life, and positive and negative psychosocial functioning. Results provided support for five meaningful yet distinguishable profiles. A strong generalizability of the cluster solution was found across age, and partial generalizability was found across gender and ethnicity. Furthermore, the five profiles showed specific patterns in relation to positive and negative psychosocial functioning. Specifically, respondents with profiles high on Presence of Meaning showed the most adaptive psychosocial functioning, whereas respondents with profiles where meaning was largely absent showed maladaptive psychosocial functioning. The present study provided additional evidence for prior research concerning the complex relationship between Presence of Meaning and Search for Meaning, and their relation with psychosocial functioning. Our results offer a partial clarification of the nature of the Search for Meaning process by distinguishing between adaptive and maladaptive searching for meaning in life.


New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development | 2012

Identity around the world: An overview

Seth J. Schwartz; Byron L. Zamboanga; Alan Meca; Rachel A. Ritchie

This chapter outlines Erik Eriksons theory of identity, empirical operationalizations of this theory, and key assumptions that have characterized the study of identity in adolescence and emerging adulthood. It discusses the origins of psychosocial identity theories in North American cultural contexts and cross-cultural issues involved in using neo-Eriksonian identity models in other contexts. In particular, the chapter examines the individualist assumptions that underlie the neo-Eriksonian approach. The chapter concludes with a review of the other six chapters in this volume and of the countries on which these other chapters focus.


Journal of Personality | 2014

Meaning in Life in Emerging Adulthood

Jessie Dezutter; Alan S. Waterman; Seth J. Schwartz; Koen Luyckx; Wim Beyers; Alan Meca; Su Yeong Kim; Susan Krauss Whitbourne; Byron L. Zamboanga; Richard M. Lee; Sam A. Hardy; Larry F. Forthun; Rachel A. Ritchie; Robert S. Weisskirch; Elissa J. Brown; S. Jean Caraway

The present study investigated naturally occurring profiles based on two dimensions of meaning in life: Presence of Meaning and Search for Meaning. Cluster analysis was used to examine meaning-in-life profiles, and subsequent analyses identified different patterns in psychosocial functioning for each profile. A sample of 8,492 American emerging adults (72.5% women) from 30 colleges and universities completed measures on meaning in life, and positive and negative psychosocial functioning. Results provided support for five meaningful yet distinguishable profiles. A strong generalizability of the cluster solution was found across age, and partial generalizability was found across gender and ethnicity. Furthermore, the five profiles showed specific patterns in relation to positive and negative psychosocial functioning. Specifically, respondents with profiles high on Presence of Meaning showed the most adaptive psychosocial functioning, whereas respondents with profiles where meaning was largely absent showed maladaptive psychosocial functioning. The present study provided additional evidence for prior research concerning the complex relationship between Presence of Meaning and Search for Meaning, and their relation with psychosocial functioning. Our results offer a partial clarification of the nature of the Search for Meaning process by distinguishing between adaptive and maladaptive searching for meaning in life.


International Journal of Psychology | 2015

Longitudinal trajectories of bicultural identity integration in recently immigrated Hispanic adolescents: Links with mental health and family functioning

Seth J. Schwartz; Jennifer B. Unger; Lourdes Baezconde-Garbanati; Verónica Benet-Martínez; Alan Meca; Byron L. Zamboanga; Elma I. Lorenzo-Blanco; Sabrina E. Des Rosiers; Assaf Oshri; Raha F. Sabet; Daniel W. Soto; Monica Pattarroyo; Shi Huang; Juan A. Villamar; Karina M. Lizzi; José Szapocznik

This study examined, in a sample of recently immigrated Hispanic adolescents in Miami and Los Angeles, the extent to which bicultural identity integration (BII; involving the ability to synthesise ones heritage and receiving cultural streams and to identify as a member of both cultures) is best understood as a developmental construct that changes over time or as an individual-difference construct that is largely stable over time. We were also interested in the extent to which these trajectories predicted mental health and family functioning. Recent-immigrant 9th graders (N = 302) were assessed 6 times from 9th to 12th grade. Latent class growth analyses using the first 5 timepoints identified 2 trajectory classes-one with lower BII scores over time and another with higher BII scores over time. Higher heritage and US identity at baseline predicted membership in the higher BII class. At the 6th study timepoint, lower BII adolescents reported significantly poorer self-esteem, optimism, prosocial behaviour and family relationships compared with their higher BII counterparts. These findings are discussed in terms of further research on the over-time trajectory of biculturalism, and on the need to develop interventions to promote BII as a way of facilitating well-being and positive family functioning.


American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse | 2014

Association of acculturation with drinking games among Hispanic college students.

Seth J. Schwartz; Byron L. Zamboanga; Cara C. Tomaso; Karli K. Kondo; Jennifer B. Unger; Robert S. Weisskirch; Lindsay S. Ham; Alan Meca; Miguel Ángel Cano; Susan Krauss Whitbourne; Aerika S. Brittian; Sabrina E. Des Rosiers; Eric A. Hurley; Alexander T. Vazsonyi; Russell D. Ravert

Abstract Objective: This cross-sectional study was conducted to investigate which components of acculturation relate to drinking games participation among Hispanic college students. We also sought to examine whether the relationships between acculturation and drinking games would differ from the associations between acculturation and other alcohol-related outcomes. Method: A sample of 1,397 Hispanic students aged 18–25 (75% women; 77% US-born) from 30 US colleges and universities completed a confidential online survey. Results: Associations among acculturative processes, drinking games participation, general alcohol consumption, and negative drinking consequences differed across gender. Most significant findings emerged in the domain of cultural practices. For women, US cultural practices were associated with greater general alcohol consumption, drinking games frequency, and amount of alcohol consumed while gaming, whereas for men, US cultural practices were associated with general alcohol consumption and negative drinking consequences. Conclusions: Hispanic and US cultural practices, values, and identifications were differentially associated with drinking games participation, and these associations differed by gender. It is therefore essential for college student alcohol research to examine US culture acquisition and Hispanic culture retention separately and within the domains of cultural practices, values, and identifications.


Journal of Youth and Adolescence | 2017

Personal Identity Development in Hispanic Immigrant Adolescents: Links with Positive Psychosocial Functioning, Depressive Symptoms, and Externalizing Problems.

Seth J. Schwartz; Jennifer B. Unger; Alan Meca; Elma I. Lorenzo-Blanco; Lourdes Baezconde-Garbanati; Miguel Ángel Cano; Brandy Piña-Watson; José Szapocznik; Byron L. Zamboanga; David Córdova; Andrea J. Romero; Tae Kyoung Lee; Daniel W. Soto; Juan A. Villamar; Karina M. Lizzi; Sabrina E. Des Rosiers; Monica Pattarroyo

The present study was designed to examine trajectories of personal identity coherence and confusion among Hispanic recent-immigrant adolescents, as well as the effects of these trajectories on psychosocial and risk-taking outcomes. Personal identity is extremely important in anchoring young immigrants during a time of acute cultural change. A sample of 302 recently immigrated (5 years or less in the United States at baseline) Hispanic adolescents (Mage = 14.51 years at baseline; SD = 0.88 years, range 14–17) from Miami and Los Angeles (47 % girls) completed measures of personal identity coherence and confusion at the first five waves of a six-wave longitudinal study; and reported on positive psychosocial functioning, depressive symptoms, and externalizing problems at baseline and at Time 6. Results indicated that identity coherence increased linearly across time, but that there were no significant changes in confusion over time and no individual differences in confusion trajectories. Higher baseline levels of, and improvements in, coherence predicted higher levels of self-esteem, optimism, and prosocial behavior at the final study timepoint. Higher baseline levels of confusion predicted lower self-esteem, greater depressive symptoms, more aggressive behavior, and more rule breaking at the final study timepoint. These results are discussed in terms of the importance of personal identity for Hispanic immigrant adolescents, and in terms of implications for intervention.


Emerging adulthood | 2015

Identity centrality and psychosocial functioning: A person-centered approach

Alan Meca; Rachel A. Ritchie; Wim Beyers; Seth J. Schwartz; Simona Picariello; Byron L. Zamboanga; Sam A. Hardy; Koen Luyckx; Su Yeong Kim; Susan Krauss Whitbourne; Elisabetta Crocetti; Elissa J. Brown; Cynthia G. Benitez

There has been increased recognition that identity operates within several “components” and that not every component is likely to be equally central to one’s sense of self. The aim of the current study was to determine the extent to which identity components (i.e., personal, relational, collective, and public) are differentially central to emerging adults’ identity. We used a two-step cluster analytic procedure to identify distinct clusters and determine how these configurations might differ in relation to psychosocial functioning (i.e., well-being, externalizing and internalizing symptoms, illicit drug use, risky sex, and impaired driving). The sample consisted of 8,309 college students (72.8% female; M age = 19.94 years, 18–29, SD = 2.01) from 30 U.S. colleges and universities. Analyses identified six unique clusters based on the centrality of the four identity components. The findings indicated that a more well-rounded identity was associated with the most favorable psychosocial functioning. Results are discussed in terms of important directions for identity research and practical implications.


Identity | 2014

Reducing Identity Distress: Results of an Identity Intervention for Emerging Adults

Alan Meca; Kyle Eichas; Shannon Quintana; Brent M. Maximin; Rachel A. Ritchie; Vanessa L. Madrazo; Gabriella M. Harari; William M. Kurtines

Emerging adulthood is a transitional period between adolescence and adulthood where positive and negative life trajectories tend to diverge, with issues surrounding identity formation playing a key role. The present study evaluated the Miami Adult Development Project, a self-facilitated identity-focused intervention. The sample consisted of 141 emerging adults (19−29 years old; M = 23.08) who completed pretest and posttest assessments. Results indicated participation in the intervention relative to the comparison group was associated with lower levels of identity distress and higher levels of well-being via the reduction of identity distress and the development of a consolidated identity (commitment and synthesis). The present study provides evidence for the effectiveness of positive identity interventions during emerging adulthood.

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Jennifer B. Unger

University of Southern California

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Daniel W. Soto

University of Southern California

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Miguel Ángel Cano

Florida International University

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