Gümüş, Özlem

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Name Variants
Gümüş,Ö.
G.,Özlem
Ö.,Gümüş
Özlem, Gümüş
Gumus, Ozlem
Ozlem, Gumus
Gümüş, Özlem
G.,Ozlem
O., Gumus
Gumus,O.
O.,Gumus
G., Ozlem
Dirilen-Gumus, Ozlem
Job Title
Doktor
Email Address
Main Affiliation
Department of Psychology
Status
Former Staff
Website
ORCID ID
Scopus Author ID
Turkish CoHE Profile ID
Google Scholar ID
WoS Researcher ID

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SDG data is not available
This researcher does not have a Scopus ID.
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Scholarly Output

6

Articles

4

Views / Downloads

15/0

Supervised MSc Theses

0

Supervised PhD Theses

0

WoS Citation Count

1816

Scopus Citation Count

1950

WoS h-index

5

Scopus h-index

5

Patents

0

Projects

0

WoS Citations per Publication

302.67

Scopus Citations per Publication

325.00

Open Access Source

2

Supervised Theses

0

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JournalCount
2nd World Conference on Psychology, Counselling and Guidance (WCPCG) -- MAY 25-29, 2011 -- Antalya, TURKEY1
Cross-Cultural Research1
Journal of Applied Social Psychology1
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology1
Sex Roles1
Current Page: 1 / 2

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Scholarly Output Search Results

Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 12
    Citation - Scopus: 13
    Gender Differences in Turkish Undergraduate Students' Values
    (Springer/plenum Publishers, 2012) Dirilen-Gumus, Ozlem; Buyuksahin-Sunal, Ayda
    The objectives of the present study were to explore gender differences in Turkish students' values. A total of 231 (125 female, 106 male) undergraduate students from various universities in Ankara (the capital city of Turkey) participated in the study. They were given the Portrait Values Questionnaire along items related to demography. It is predicted that firstly, females would have higher scores on universalism, benevolence and security than males; secondly, males would have higher score on power than females. The results showed that females reported higher levels of hedonism, universalism, benevolence and security than males. The findings were discussed in the light of the relevant literature. The present study can be considered as a contribution to the existing literature on gender-based differences on value priorities by examining a rarely investigated culture-that is, Turkish.