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Dive into the research topics where Dolores Seijo is active.

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Featured researches published by Dolores Seijo.


Frontiers in Psychology | 2016

Estimating the Epidemiology and Quantifying the Damages of Parental Separation in Children and Adolescents

Dolores Seijo; Francisca Fariña; Tania Corras; Mercedes Novo; Ramón Arce

Parental separation is linked to multiple negative outcomes for children in all spheres of life. A field study was designed to estimate the epidemiology and to quantify the outcomes on the wellbeing of children from separated parents. Thus, data on socio-economic status, psychological adjustment, behavioral disorders, social relations, self-concept, and academic achievement were gathered from 346 children and adolescents, 173 separated parents, and 173 parents from intact families in the paediatric catchment area of Galicia (Spain). The results showed that parental separation had a significant negative impact on the children’s and adolescents’ family income (increasing the probability of falling below the poverty line); psychological adjustment (i.e., higher scores in anxiety, depression, hostility, paranoid ideation, and interpersonal alienation); social relations (i.e., less self-control in social relations; higher social withdrawal); self-concept (lower levels of academic, emotional, physical, and family self-concept), and academic achievement (lower academic achievement with higher school dropout rates). Moreover, children from separated families had a higher probability of being exposed to gender violence. Epidemiologically, parental separation is associated to the probability of falling below the poverty line 33.9%; being exposed to gender violence 43.2%; and symptoms such as depression, anxiety, hostility, paranoid ideation interpersonal alienation, and social withdrawal, i.e., 20, 17, 27, 20, 19, and 35.5%, respectively. Inversely, self-control in social relations, and academic, emotional, physical, and family self-concept fell to 16, 32, 27, 22, and 37%, respectively. The interrelationship among these variables and the implications of these results for interventions are discussed.


Assessment | 2015

Assessing Impression Management With the MMPI-2 in Child Custody Litigation

Ramón Arce; Francisca Fariña; Dolores Seijo; Mercedes Novo

Forensic psychological evaluation of parents in child custody litigation is primarily focused on evaluating parenting capacity and underreporting. The biased responses of underreporting have been classified as Impression Management (IM) or as Self-Deceptive Positivity (S-DP), which are regarded to be conscious or unconscious in nature, respectively. A field study was undertaken to assess impression management on the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory–2 (MMPI-2) in child custody cases, the accuracy of the MMPI-2 scales in classifying IM, and what parents in child custody litigation actually manipulate in terms of IM. A total of 244 parents in child custody litigation and 244 parents under standard instructions were administered the MMPI-2. The results revealed that the L, Mp, Wsd, and Od scales discriminated between both samples of parents; the rate of satisfactory classification (i.e., odds ratio ranged from 5.7 for Wsd to 23.3 for Od) and an incremental validity of Od over Mp and Wsd. As for the effects of IM, the results show IM effects in the Basic Clinical Scales, the Restructured Clinical Scales, the Personality Psychopathology Five Scales, the Content Scales, and the Supplementary Scales. The implications of the results are discussed in relation to the forensic evaluation of parents in child custody litigation.


International Journal of Clinical and Health Psychology | 2017

A meta-analytic review of the MMPI validity scales and indexes to detect defensiveness in custody evaluations

Francisca Fariña; Laura Redondo; Dolores Seijo; Mercedes Novo; Ramón Arce

Background/Objective: In child custody disputes, one of the remit of the forensic psychologist is to evaluate parental attributes while suspecting defensiveness. The instrument of choice for undertaking this double task is the MMPI. Method: As to establish the state of the art on this, a meta-analysis was undertaken with a total of 32 primary studies from which 256 effect sizes were assessed. A meta-analysis was undertaken, effect sizes were corrected for sampling error and criterion unreliability. Results: The results revealed a positive, significant, large and generalizable mean true effect size for the L, K, S and MP scales, and the L + K and L + K-F indexes. The Wsd was positive, significant and large, but not generalizable. A negative and significant, but not generalizable mean true effect size was found for the F and generalizable for F–K index. The effect sizes for the L, K, S and MP scales, and the L + K and L + K-F indexes were equal. Both the gender of parents (father vs. mother) and the context of evaluation (parent child custody disputes vs. parenting capacity) were assessed as moderators. Conclusions: The results are discussed in relation to forensic practice.


Frontiers in Psychology | 2017

What and How Much Do Children Lose in Academic Settings Owing to Parental Separation

Tania Corras; Dolores Seijo; Francisca Fariña; Mercedes Novo; Ramón Arce; Ramón González Cabanach

The literature has firmly established an association between parental separation and school failure. Nevertheless, parental separation does not affect academic aptitudes. Thus, mediators explain such relationship. A field study was designed to identify and quantify damage in the mediating variables between parental separation and school failure (i.e., external school adjustment, aversion to institution, aversion to learning, aversion to instruction, aversion to teachers, indiscipline). A total of 196 children, classified into three age cohorts: 109 in level 1 (from 8 to 11 years), 46 in level 2 (from 12 to 14 years), and 41 in level 3 (15 or more years), were assessed in school adjustment and in underlying dimensions of school (mal)adjustment. The results showed significant effects of parental separation in school adjustment and in the underlying dimensions to maladjustment in the three classification levels. The magnitude of damage increased with age, i.e., small in level 1, moderate in 2, and large in 3. Damage in all the sub-dimensions underlying school (mal)adjustment was quantified. The implications of the results for the design and implementation of prevention and intervention programs for children from separated parents are discussed.


Estudios De Psicologia | 1999

Dudas sobre la duda razonable

Francisca Fariña; Ramón Arce; Dolores Seijo

ResumenEl intento legal de control de los sesgos en la toma de decisiones por parte de jurados viene de la mano de las instrucciones judiciales sobre la carga de la prueba. Este trabajo analiza los efectos del criterio “duda razonable” sobre la decision de los jurados. Los resultados contradicen las predicciones apareciend diferencias en la cuantificacion de este estandar de culpabilidad mediadas por la interaccion del tipo d caso (p.e., violacion, robo, fuga d divisas y negligencia medica) y algunas variables psicosociales (i.e., genero, locus de control, autoposicionamiento politico, dogmatismo, actitudes hacia la delincuencia juvenil, conservadurismo). Finalmente se discuten los resultados con vistas a formar jurados que ejecuten de un modo eficaz.


Revista Mexicana De Psicologia | 2010

Comportamiento antisocial en menores: Riesgo social y trayectoria natural de desarrollo

Ramón Arce; Dolores Seijo; Francisca Fariña; Laila Mohamed-Mohand


Psicothema | 2005

Razonamientos judiciales en procesos de separación

Ramón Arce; Francisca Fariña; Dolores Seijo


European Journal of Psychology Applied to Legal Context | 2010

Judicial judgement-making and legal criteria of testimonial credibility

Dolores Seijo; Mercedes Novo


Revista Iberoamericana de Psicología y Salud | 2011

Estudio de la eficacia de las categorías de realidad del testimonio del Sistema de Evaluación Global (SEG) en casos de violencia de género

Manuel Vilariño; Mercedes Novo; Dolores Seijo


Archive | 2012

Efecto del sistema de enseñanza en el rendimiento académico, burnout experimentado y estrés académico

Ramón Arce; Francisca Fariña; Mercedes Novo; Dolores Seijo

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Ramón Arce

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Mercedes Novo

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Tania Corras

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Manuel Vilariño

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Benjamín Salvador

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Berta Cajal

University of the Balearic Islands

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