Öngi̇der, Nilgün

Loading...
Profile Picture
Name Variants
Job Title
Email Address
nongider@gmail.com
Main Affiliation
02.04. Psychology
Status
Former Staff
Website
Scopus Author ID
Turkish CoHE Profile ID
Google Scholar ID
WoS Researcher ID

Sustainable Development Goals

SDG data is not available
Documents

2

Citations

10

h-index

2

Documents

5

Citations

84

Scholarly Output

1

Articles

1

Views / Downloads

0/0

Supervised MSc Theses

0

Supervised PhD Theses

0

WoS Citation Count

4

Scopus Citation Count

6

WoS h-index

1

Scopus h-index

1

Patents

0

Projects

0

WoS Citations per Publication

4.00

Scopus Citations per Publication

6.00

Open Access Source

0

Supervised Theses

0

JournalCount
Noropsıkıyatrı Arsıvı-Archıves of Neuropsychıatry1
Current Page: 1 / 1

Scopus Quartile Distribution

Competency Cloud

GCRIS Competency Cloud

Scholarly Output Search Results

Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 4
    Citation - Scopus: 6
    Investigation of Anxiety Levels in Divorced and Married Mothers and Theirs Children
    (Galenos Yayincilik, 2011) Ongider, Nilgun
    Objective: In this investigation, anxiety levels of divorced/married mothers and their children were compared to examine the effects of divorce on children. Methods: 3(rd)-6(th) grade children from an elementary school in the City of Izmir, whose parents were divorced or married, and their mothers were sampled. The State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI) for children, STAI for mothers and individual data questionnaire were administered to both children and mothers. Results: State-trait anxiety levels were found to be increased in children of divorced parents compared to those in children of married parents (t=4.13 p<0.05, t=5.08 p<0.05). Similarly, state-trait anxiety levels in divorced mothers were higher than those in married mothers (t=5.76 p<0.05, t=6.31 p<.01). Conclusion: It is interpreted that divorce has negative effect on mothers and children when considering the findings suggesting increment in anxiety levels in mothers and children of divorced families. (Archives of Neuropsychiatry 2011; 48: 66-70)