The Role of Individual-Typological Characteristics in the Process of Family Adaptation of Young Brides

D. K. Arapbaeva, D. K. Arapbaeva

2023

Abstract

This research explores the role of individual-typological characteristics in young brides' family adaptation. Psychological adaptation is viewed as an individual's adjustment to a group, society, and environment, with social adaptation divided into society (macro-environment), social group (micro-environment), and the individual (internal adaptation). The study involved 50 Kazakh and 50 Uzbek brides from the Konimekh and Navbahor districts respectively. The analysis utilized G.Eysenck's methodology, identifying four types of temperament: stable-introvert (phlegmatic); unstable-introvert (melancholic); stable-extrovert (sanguine) and unstable-extrovert (choleric). Current scientific schools suggest assessing temperament through multiple characteristics, leading us to adopt terms directly expressing these.

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Paper Citation


in Harvard Style

Arapbaeva D. (2023). The Role of Individual-Typological Characteristics in the Process of Family Adaptation of Young Brides. In Proceedings of the 1st Pamir Transboundary Conference for Sustainable Societies - Volume 1: PAMIR; ISBN 978-989-758-687-3, SciTePress, pages 203-207. DOI: 10.5220/0012482800003792


in Bibtex Style

@conference{pamir23,
author={D. K. Arapbaeva},
title={The Role of Individual-Typological Characteristics in the Process of Family Adaptation of Young Brides},
booktitle={Proceedings of the 1st Pamir Transboundary Conference for Sustainable Societies - Volume 1: PAMIR},
year={2023},
pages={203-207},
publisher={SciTePress},
organization={INSTICC},
doi={10.5220/0012482800003792},
isbn={978-989-758-687-3},
}


in EndNote Style

TY - CONF

JO - Proceedings of the 1st Pamir Transboundary Conference for Sustainable Societies - Volume 1: PAMIR
TI - The Role of Individual-Typological Characteristics in the Process of Family Adaptation of Young Brides
SN - 978-989-758-687-3
AU - Arapbaeva D.
PY - 2023
SP - 203
EP - 207
DO - 10.5220/0012482800003792
PB - SciTePress