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Dive into the research topics where Carmen Buzea is active.

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Featured researches published by Carmen Buzea.


European Journal of Personality | 2017

On enhancing the cross-cultural comparability of Likert-Scale Personality and Value Measures: A comparison of common procedures : Enhancing comparability

Jia He; Fons J. R. van de Vijver; Velichko H. Fetvadjiev; Alejandra de Carmen Dominguez Espinosa; Byron G. Adams; Itziar Alonso-Arbiol; Arzu Aydinli-Karakulak; Carmen Buzea; Radosveta Dimitrova; Alvaro Fortin; Given Hapunda; Sang Ma; Ruta Sargautyte; Samantha Sim; Maja K. Schachner; Angela O. Suryani; Pia Zeinoun; Rui Zhang

This study aims to evaluate a number of procedures that have been proposed to enhance cross–cultural comparability of personality and value data. A priori procedures (anchoring vignettes and direct measures of response styles (i.e. acquiescence, extremity, midpoint responding, and social desirability), a posteriori procedures focusing on data transformations prior to analysis (ipsatization and item parcelling), and two data modelling procedures (treating data as continuous vs as ordered categories) were compared using data collected from university students in 16 countries. We found that (i) anchoring vignettes showed lack of invariance, so they were not bias–free; (ii) anchoring vignettes showed higher internal consistencies than raw scores where all other correction procedures, notably ipsatization, showed lower internal consistencies; (iii) in measurement invariance testing, no procedure yielded scalar invariance; anchoring vignettes and item parcelling slightly improved comparability, response style correction did not affect it, and ipsatization resulted in lower comparability; (iv) treating Likert–scale data as categorical resulted in higher levels of comparability; (v) factor scores of scales extracted from different procedures showed similar correlational patterning; and (vi) response style correction was the only procedure that suggested improvement in external validity of country–level conscientiousness. We conclude that, although no procedure resolves all comparability issues, anchoring vignettes, parcelling, and treating data as ordered categories seem promising to alleviate incomparability. We advise caution in uncritically applying any of these procedures. Copyright


European Journal of Developmental Psychology | 2018

Relationships between identity domains and life satisfaction in minority and majority youth in Albania, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Kosovo, and Romania

Radosveta Dimitrova; Carmen Buzea; Jitka Tausova; Fitim Uka; Skerdi Zakaj; Elisabetta Crocetti

Abstract The purpose of this study was to examine relationships between identity domains (educational and relational identity) and life satisfaction in a cross-national perspective, by targeting minority (Roma) and majority youth in Albania, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Kosovo, and Romania. Based on the three-factor identity formation model, we investigated the interplay between three identity processes (i.e., commitment, in-depth exploration, and reconsideration of commitment) and life satisfaction. Participants were 1860 adolescents aged 12–19 years from Albania (n = 350), Bulgaria (n = 398), the Czech Republic (n = 293), Kosovo (n = 542), and Romania (n = 277). They completed self-reports of the Utrecht-Management of Identity Commitments Scale (U-MICS) and the Life Satisfaction Scale (SWLS). We adopted a structural equation modelling approach to test (a) measurement invariance of identity and life satisfaction models across groups and (b) associations between identity domains (educational and relational) and life satisfaction. Findings indicated measurement invariance for identity and life satisfaction measures across cultural groups. In the total sample, life satisfaction was consistently associated with high commitment, high in-depth exploration, and low reconsideration of commitment in the educational identity domain. Sample-specific associations highlighted important cultural differences. Implications of these findings for identity and well-being in minority and mainstream youth across the countries under investigation are discussed.


Archive | 2017

Positive Affect and the Experience of Meaning in Life Among Romanian Emerging Adults

Carmen Buzea; Radosveta Dimitrova

Meaning in life has been consistently documented as an essential component for a “good life” and a key to positive functioning (Davis, Wortman, Lehman, & Silver, 2000; Scollon & King, 2004). In this chapter, we examined the relationship between positive affect (PA) and the experience of life meaning among emerging adults in Romania. Results showed that PA was positively and significantly correlated with meaning of life and the most consistent predictor of the overall experience of meaning in life. We conclude that positive moods may predispose emerging adults to feel that life is meaningful. These results provide new knowledge on the construct of meaning in life among under investigated cultural sample in Europe in line with renewed attention on psychological strengths in emerging adulthood.


Child Development | 2017

Ethnic, Familial, and Religious Identity of Roma Adolescents in Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Kosovo, and Romania in Relation to Their Level of Well-Being

Radosveta Dimitrova; Fons J. R. van de Vijver; Jitka Tausova; Athanasios Chasiotis; Michael Bender; Carmen Buzea; Fitim Uka; Ergyul Tair


European Journal of Psychological Assessment | 2016

The Utrecht-Management of Identity Commitments Scale (U-MICS): Measurement Invariance and Cross-National Comparisons of Youth From Seven European Countries

Radosveta Dimitrova; Elisabetta Crocetti; Carmen Buzea; Venzislav Jordanov; Marianna Kosic; Ergyul Tair; Jitka Tausova; Natasja van Cittert; Fitim Uka


Revista de Asistenţă Socială | 2015

Nationalistic Attitudes and Perceived Threat Determine Romaphobia among Bulgarian and Romanian Youth

Venzislav Jordanov; Carmen Buzea; Vanja Ljujic; Radosveta Dimitrova


Revista De Cercetare Si Interventie Sociala | 2013

Reward–allocation judgments in Romania: a factorial survey approach

Carmen Buzea; Luiza Mesesan-Schmitz; Fons J. R. van de Vijver


Revista de Asistenţă Socială | 2015

The influence of nationalism and national identity on well-being of Bulgarian and Romanian youth.

Radosveta Dimitrova; Vanja Ljujic; Carmen Buzea; Venzislav Jordanov


Journal of Happiness Studies | 2018

Perceived Organizational Support for the Use of Employees’ Strengths and Employee Well-Being: A Cross-Country Comparison

Maria Christina Meyers; Byron G. Adams; Lusanda Sekaja; Carmen Buzea; Ana-Maria Cazan; Mihaela Gotea; Delia Stefenel; Marianne van Woerkom


Social Work Review | 2016

Internal versus External Ethnic Identification of Roma : Implications for Social Inclusion in Romania

Carmen Buzea; Radosveta Dimitrova

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Byron G. Adams

University of Johannesburg

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Lusanda Sekaja

University of Johannesburg

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Ergyul Tair

Bulgarian Academy of Sciences

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