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Dive into the research topics where Albertine J. Oldehinkel is active.

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Featured researches published by Albertine J. Oldehinkel.


Developmental Psychology | 2005

Bullying and victimization in elementary schools : A comparison of bullies, victims, bully/victims, and uninvolved preadolescents

René Veenstra; Siegwart Lindenberg; Albertine J. Oldehinkel; Andrea F. de Winter; Frank C. Verhulst; Johan Ormel

Research on bullying and victimization largely rests on univariate analyses and on reports from a single informant. Researchers may thus know too little about the simultaneous effects of various independent and dependent variables, and their research may be biased by shared method variance. The database for this Dutch study was large (N = 1,065) and rich enough to allow multivariate analysis and multi-source information. In addition, the effect of familial vulnerability for internalizing and externalizing disorders was studied. Gender, aggressiveness, isolation, and dislikability were most strongly related to bullying and victimization. Among the many findings that deviated from or enhanced the univariate knowledge base were that not only victims and bully/victims but bullies as well were disliked and that parenting was unrelated to bullying and victimization once other factors were controlled.


European Journal of Epidemiology | 2005

Evaluation of non-response bias in mental health determinants and outcomes in a large sample of pre-adolescents

Andrea F. de Winter; Albertine J. Oldehinkel; René Veenstra; J. Agnes Brunnekreef; Frank C. Verhulst; Johan Ormel

Since non-response may jeopardize the validity of studies, comprehensive assessment of non-response is a prerequisite for proper interpretation of study findings. Recently, the baseline assessment of the TRacking Adolescents’ Individual Lives Survey (TRAILS), a prospective cohort study among Dutch pre-adolescents, was completed. The aim of this report is to examine non-response bias by comparing responders and non-responders regarding mental health determinants (e.g., demographics and cognitive performance) and outcomes, as well as associations between the two. Furthermore, we examine whether extended efforts to recruit participants contribute to the prevention or reduction of non-response bias. Thanks to various recruitment procedures, the initial response rate of 66% increased to a final rate of 76%. The extended efforts to recruit participants prevented non-response bias in the prevalence rates of psychopathology. Although non-responders differed from responders with respect to several individual characteristics, no significant differences were found regarding associations between these characteristics and psychopathology. We conclude that TRAILS provides a solid basis to improve our understanding of the development of mental health during adolescence.


Development and Psychopathology | 2004

Temperament profiles associated with internalizing and externalizing problems in preadolescence

Albertine J. Oldehinkel; Catharina A. Hartman; Andrea F. de Winter; René Veenstra; Johan Ormel

This study investigates how temperament factors are linked to internalizing and externalizing problems in a Dutch population sample of preadolescents (N = 2230). Internalizing and externalizing problems were assessed by the Child Behavior Checklist and the Youth Self-Report and temperament was evaluated by the parent-version of the Revised Early Adolescent Temperament Questionnaire. Temperament profiles were examined in children with (a) neither internalizing nor externalizing problems, (b) only internalizing problems, (c) only externalizing problems, and (d) both internalizing and externalizing problems. The results suggest clearly diverging temperament profiles for these groups of children, with High-Intensity Pleasure and Shyness (representing the broad dimension of Surgency) steering the conditional probability of internalizing and externalizing problems (direction markers), Frustration mainly being related to maladaptation in general (severity marker), and Fear and Effortful Control being associated with both the severity and the direction of internalizing and externalizing problems, respectively. Girls and boys differed in the distribution across the problem groups, but the associations between temperament and psychopathology were comparable for both genders.


Psychoneuroendocrinology | 2005

Determinants of salivary cortisol levels in 10–12 year old children; a population-based study of individual differences

Judith Rosmalen; Albertine J. Oldehinkel; Johan Ormel; Af de Winter; Jan K. Buitelaar; Frank C. Verhulst

The hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA)-axis is a central component of the bodys neuroendocrine response to stress. Its major end-product cortisol has profound effects on mood and behavior. Although it has often been suggested, it remains unknown whether differences in HPA-axis physiology are part of an individuals vulnerability to psychopathology, and constitute a causal factor in its development. In order to study the contribution of HPA-axis physiology to the development of psychopathology, we measured HPA-axis physiology in a community-cohort of 1768 10-12 year-old children. The aims of the here presented study were twofold: (1) to obtain data on HPA-axis function in a large cohort of pre- and early-adolescent children, both in terms of total hormonal output and in terms of the dynamics of cortisol secretion (by means of the cortisol awakening response); and (2) to study potential confounders of the cortisol-psychopathology relationship in this age group, such as season of sampling, age, gender, pubertal development, perinatal variables and BMI. We found a wide interindividual variability in HPA-axis function. An increase in cortisol in the first 30 min after awakening was present in 70.7% of children, but the increase appears lower in children than in adults. In addition, this study suggests that season of sampling and gender may act as potential confounders in the cortisol-psychopathology relationship. We will follow these children longitudinally for the development of psychopathology in the period from childhood into adulthood. This period covers adolescence, which is a critical time for the appearance and development of psychiatric disorders.


Journal of Affective Disorders | 2001

Depression in later life: three etiologically different subgroups

Marjan D van den Berg; Albertine J. Oldehinkel; Antoinette L. Bouhuys; Els I. Brilman; Aartjan T.F. Beekman; Johan Ormel

BACKGROUND Various studies support the notion that early onset depression and late onset depression have different etiological pathways. Late onset depression has been found to be a heterogeneous group. This study attempts to divide the late onset group in two subgroups with different aetiology and find evidence for the vascular depression hypothesis. METHODS Subjects were 132 depressed elderly persons from the general population, general practitioners and mental health care outpatient clinics. Sixty-four had early-onset depression (< 60), 69 had late-onset depression (> or = 60). The latter group was divided into subjects with (n = 15) and without (n = 15) severe life stress. The groups were compared with respect to a variety of variables including vascular risk factors RESULTS Early-onset depression was associated with neuroticism and parental history. Subjects with late-onset depression and no severe life stress had higher vascular risk factors than whose depression was preceded by a severe stressor did. CONCLUSIONS Our findings suggest that late life depression can be divided into subgroups with different etiological pathways: (1) early-onset with longstanding psychobiological vulnerability; (2) late-onset as reaction to severe life stress; and (3) late-onset with vascular risk factors.


Clinical Psychology Review | 2013

Neuroticism and common mental disorders: meaning and utility of a complex relationship.

Johan Ormel; Bertus F. Jeronimus; Roman Kotov; Harriette Riese; Elisabeth H. Bos; Benjamin L. Hankin; Judith Rosmalen; Albertine J. Oldehinkel

Neuroticisms prospective association with common mental disorders (CMDs) has fueled the assumption that neuroticism is an independent etiologically informative risk factor. This vulnerability model postulates that neuroticism sets in motion processes that lead to CMDs. However, four other models seek to explain the association, including the spectrum model (manifestations of the same process), common cause model (shared determinants), state and scar models (CMD episode adds temporary/permanent neuroticism). To examine their validity we reviewed literature on confounding, operational overlap, stability and change, determinants, and treatment effects. None of the models is able to account for (virtually) all findings. The state and scar model cannot explain the prospective association. The spectrum model has some relevance, especially for internalizing disorders. Common causes are most important but the vulnerability model cannot be excluded although confounding of the prospective association by baseline symptoms and psychiatric history is substantial. In fact, some of the findings, such as interactions with stress and the small decay of neuroticisms effect over time, are consistent with the vulnerability model. We describe research designs that discriminate the remaining models and plea for deconstruction of neuroticism. Neuroticism is etiologically not informative yet but useful as an efficient marker of non-specified general risk.


Development and Psychopathology | 2007

Effortful control as modifier of the association between negative emotionality and adolescents' mental health problems

Albertine J. Oldehinkel; Catharina A. Hartman; Robert F. Ferdinand; Frank C. Verhulst; Johan Ormel

This study examined the extent to which effortful control moderated the risk of internalizing or externalizing problems associated with high negative emotionality in a Dutch population sample of pre- and early adolescents (N = 1,922). Internalizing and externalizing problems were assessed with the Child Behavior Checklist, Youth Self-Report, and Teacher Checklist of Psychopathology. Temperament (effortful control, fearfulness, frustration) was assessed with the parent version of the Revised Early Adolescent Temperament Questionnaire. The effects of fearfulness and frustration appeared to be attenuated by high levels of effortful control. The associations differed between the two domains of mental health investigated: effortful control reduced the effect of fearfulness on internalizing problems and the effect of frustration on externalizing problems. The effects were stronger for externalizing problems and similar for preadolescent (age 11) and adolescent (age 13/14) outcomes.


Translational Psychiatry | 2011

Differential susceptibility in youth: evidence that 5-HTTLPR x positive parenting is associated with positive affect 'for better and worse'

Benjamin L. Hankin; Esther Nederhof; Caroline W. Oppenheimer; Jessica L. Jenness; Jami F. Young; John R. Z. Abela; Andrew Smolen; Johan Ormel; Albertine J. Oldehinkel

Positive affect has been implicated in the phenomenological experience of various psychiatric disorders, vulnerability to develop psychopathology and overall socio-emotional functioning. However, developmental influences that may contribute to positive affect have been understudied. Here, we studied youths’ 5-HTTLPR genotype and rearing environment (degree of positive and supportive parenting) to investigate the differential susceptibility hypothesis (DSH) that youth carrying short alleles of 5-HTTLPR would be more influenced and responsive to supportive and unsupportive parenting, and would exhibit higher and lower positive affect, respectively. Three independent studies tested this gene–environment interaction (GxE) in children and adolescents (age range 9–15 years; total N=1874). In study 1 (N=307; 54% girls), positive/supportive parenting was assessed via parent report, in study 2 (N=197; 58% girls) via coded observations of parent–child interactions in the laboratory and in study 3 (N=1370; 53% girls) via self report. Results from all the three studies showed that youth homozygous for the functional short allele of 5-HTTLPR were more responsive to parenting as environmental context in a ‘for better and worse’ manner. Specifically, the genetically susceptible youth (that is, S’S’ group) who experienced unsupportive, non-positive parenting exhibited low levels of positive affect, whereas higher levels of positive affect were reported by genetically susceptible youth under supportive and positive parenting conditions. These GxE findings are consistent with the DSH and may inform etiological models and interventions in developmental psychopathology focused on positive emotion, parenting and genetic susceptibility.


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2001

Urinary free cortisol excretion in elderly persons with minor and major depression

Albertine J. Oldehinkel; Marjan D van den Berg; Frans Flentge; Antoinette L. Bouhuys; Gert J. Ter Horst; Johan Ormel

Several studies have found that cortisol hypersecretion may occur in severely depressed patients, characterized by melancholic features. On the other hand, illness chronicity seems to be related to low, rather than high, cortisol levels. This study aims to trace factors associated with 24-h urinary free cortisol levels in a sample of 23 elderly persons with major or minor depression and 21 non-depressed control subjects. Depressive episodes were subdivided according to severity and chronicity (i.e. length and recurrence). None of the depressed persons showed unusually high 24-h cortisol levels, and cortisol excretion was not elevated as compared with that in the control group, regardless of subtype of depression. The results suggest, however, that hyposecretion of cortisol may be a feature of chronic depressive episodes, especially in males.


Psychoneuroendocrinology | 2008

Rejection sensitivity relates to hypocortisolism and depressed mood state in young women

Mattie Tops; Harriette Riese; Albertine J. Oldehinkel; Fruehling V. Rijsdijk; Johan Ormel

Rejection sensitivity and the associated fear of negative social evaluation (FNSE) trait are characteristics of hypocortisolemic syndromes such as atypical depression. However, a meta-analysis showed that acute FNSE evokes strong cortisol responses in humans. This is consistent with suggestions that hypocortisolism reflects a protective adaptation to a history of high cortisol responses. This leads us to hypothesize that measures of trait FNSE relate to hypocortisolism. Moreover, because FNSE relates positively to depressed mood state, but negatively to cortisol, we expect that the positive relationship between depressed mood state and cortisol will show up most clearly when controlling for the confounding effect of FNSE on this relationship. In the present study we measured salivary cortisol awakening response and psychological variables in 194 community women aged 18-30 years. The results confirmed our hypotheses. We propose that dispositional FNSE is associated with a history of frequent high cortisol responses, leading to long-term protective inhibition of further cortisol and energy mobilization. The present results have special relevance for mental health problems that have high prevalence among young women.

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Johan Ormel

University Medical Center Groningen

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Frank C. Verhulst

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Catharina A. Hartman

University Medical Center Groningen

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Judith Rosmalen

University Medical Center Groningen

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Harriette Riese

University Medical Center Groningen

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Esther Nederhof

University Medical Center Groningen

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Elisabeth H. Bos

University Medical Center Groningen

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