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Dive into the research topics where Jean-Christophe Meunier is active.

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Featured researches published by Jean-Christophe Meunier.


International Journal of Behavioral Development | 2011

Relations between parenting and child behavior : exploring the child's personality and parental self-efficacy as third variables

Jean-Christophe Meunier; Isabelle Roskam; Dillon T. Browne

The present study explores the bidirectional associations between parental behavior and child externalizing behavior in the context of two intervening variables: child’s personality as a moderator of the effect of parental behavior on later child behavior; and parental self-efficacy as a mediator of the effect of child behavior on later parental behavior. Data were collected twice within one year from a sample of 340 preschoolers and their parents. Using latent variable SEM, three models were computed separately for mother—child and father—child dyads. A bidirectional effect was verified for the mothers, but only a child effect was observed for the fathers. Expected mediation by self-efficacy was verified. Finally, a partial moderating role for child’s personality was demonstrated.


Journal of Experimental Child Psychology | 2014

The development of children's inhibition: Does parenting matter?

Isabelle Roskam; Marie Stievenart; Jean-Christophe Meunier; Marie-Pascale Noël

Whereas a large body of research has investigated the maturation of inhibition in relation to the prefrontal cortex, far less research has been devoted to environmental factors that could contribute to inhibition improvement. The aim of the current study was to test whether and to what extent parenting matters for inhibition development from 2 to 8years of age. Data were collected from 421 families, with 348 mother-child dyads and 342 father-child dyads participating. Childrens inhibition capacities and parenting behaviors were assessed in a three-wave longitudinal data collection. The main analyses examined the impact of parenting on the development of childrens inhibition capacities. They were conducted using a multilevel modeling (MLM) framework. The results lead to the conclusion that both mothers and fathers contribute through their child-rearing behavior to their childrens executive functioning, even when controlling for age-related improvement (maturation) and important covariates such as gender, verbal IQ, and place of enrollment. More significant relations between childrens inhibition development and parenting were displayed for mothers than for fathers. More precisely, parenting behaviors that involve higher monitoring, lower discipline, inconsistency and negative controlling, and a positive parenting style are associated with good development of inhibition capacities in children.


Journal of Family Psychology | 2012

The Role of Parental Personality Traits in Differential Parenting

Dillon T. Browne; Jean-Christophe Meunier; Thomas G. O'Connor; Jennifer M. Jenkins

Significant relationships have been demonstrated between parental personality and parenting toward individual children, but there is little research exploring the relationship between parental personality and differential parenting (DP). The present study examined the relationship between the Big Five personality dimensions and differential positivity and negativity in parenting (observed and self-report measures). The analyses are based on a sample of 867 children nested within 381 families. Using multilevel modeling and controlling for child age, gender, birth order, behavior, and family socioeconomic status analyses revealed that maternal and paternal agreeableness were inversely related to reports of differential positivity. Agreeableness predicted observed differential negativity, and the relationship was curvilinear (at both high and low levels of agreeableness, differential negativity was higher). Finally, mothers with the most openness to experience exhibited the highest levels of reported differential negativity. The findings suggest that parental personality is a modest yet important influence to consider when conceptualizing the sources of DP.


International Journal of Behavioral Development | 2011

The reciprocal relation between children's attachment representations and their cognitive ability

Marie Stievenart; Isabelle Roskam; Jean-Christophe Meunier; Gaëlle Van de Moortele

This study explores reciprocal relations between children’s attachment representations and their cognitive ability. Previous literature has mainly focused on the prediction of cognitive abilities from attachment, rarely on the reverse prediction. This was explored in the current research. Attachment representations were assessed with the Attachment Story Completion Task (Bretherton, Ridgeway, & Cassidy, 1990); the IQ was measured with the WPPSI-III (Wechsler, 2004). Data were collected twice, at a two-year interval, from about 400 preschoolers. Reasoning IQ was found to influence the development of secure attachment representations, while attachment security and disorganization influenced later verbal IQ. The implications of the findings for both clinical and research purposes are discussed in the light of the interactions between cognitive abilities and attachment representations.


International Journal of Behavioral Development | 2012

The Determinants of Parental Childrearing Behavior Trajectories: The Effects of Parental and Child Time-Varying and Time-Invariant Predictors.

Isabelle Roskam; Jean-Christophe Meunier

“Why do parents parent the way they do?” remains an important question since it concerns both scientific issues, such as the stability or change of childrearing behavior, and clinical issues, such as the way to promote positive parenting in evidence-based programs. Using an accelerated design, the aim of this study was to examine several parental and child predictors of childrearing behavior trajectories among 373 mothers and 356 fathers of 2- to 9-year-old children. Hypotheses were drawn from Belsky (1984) and subsequent studies of the determinants of parenting. The parental and child predictors were assessed and analyzed as time-varying (parental self-efficacy beliefs and child externalizing behavior) or time-invariant (parental educational level and personality traits) predictors, according to their conceptual properties. The results show a linear decrease in both supportive and controlling childrearing behavior in mothers and an improvement in supportive but a decrease in controlling childrearing behavior in fathers over time. Moreover, the results support the idea that childrearing behavior is determined by multiple factors, in particular the parents’ self-efficacy beliefs and the child’s behavior. Finally, the results confirm the hypothesis of a greater influence of child predictors than of parental ones in the case of mothers, while the reverse hypothesis of a greater predictive power of parental variables than of child ones is confirmed for fathers. The results are discussed both for research and clinical purposes.


Journal of Social and Personal Relationships | 2012

Parental differential treatment, child’s externalizing behavior and sibling relationships: Bridging links with child’s perception of favoritism and personality, and parents’ self-efficacy

Jean-Christophe Meunier; Isabelle Roskam; Marie Stievenart; Gaëlle Van de Moortele; Dillon T. Browne; Mark Wade

This study examined the associations between parental differential treatment (PDT), children’s externalizing behavior (EB), and sibling relationships, as well as the intervening effects of children’s perceptions of favoritism, personality, and parents’ self-efficacy (SE). A total of 117 families having a child clinically referred for EB problems were studied. First, the role of PDT and perceived favoritism on EB and sibling relationships was examined. PDT was moderately related to both EB and sibling affection. Perception of favoritism was only predictive of sibling hostility. Second, EB effects on PDT were examined and the mediating role of parents’ SE within this relation was explored. EB predicted higher level PDT in parents and the link between PDT and EB was mediated by parental SE.


SAGE Open | 2015

From Parents to Siblings and Peers: The Wonderful Story of Social Development

Isabelle Roskam; Jean-Christophe Meunier; Marie Stievenart

The objective of the current research was to test the hypotheses arising from the epigenetic view of social development and from the wider perspective offered by the social network model with three interactional systems, that is, child–parent, child–sibling, and child–peer. They were tested in two prospective longitudinal studies using a multi-informant and multi-method strategy. Study 1 was conducted among 83 children and their parents and Study 2 among 190 children. Attachment security with parents was assessed when the children were 4 years of age, relationships with siblings at 5 years of age, and relationships with peers at 6 years of age. Attachment to parent was found to explain a limited part of variations in later social relationships with siblings and peers. The sibling interactional system had a consistent and enduring effect on later peer relationships. With regard to the two theoretical backgrounds under consideration, neither was able to account for equivocal findings displayed in the two studies as well as in previous research. The wonderful story of social development seems to be a very complex process for which new models are needed.


Research in Developmental Disabilities | 2013

When there Seem to be No Predetermining Factors: Early Child and Proximal Family Risk Predicting Externalizing Behavior in Young Children Incurring No Distal Family Risk.

Isabelle Roskam; Jean-Christophe Meunier; Marie Stievenart; Marie-Pascale Noël

The main objective of the current study was to examine the impact of two child risk factors, i.e. personality and inhibition, and two proximal family risk factors, i.e. parenting and attachment, and the impact of their cumulative effect on later externalizing behavior among young children incurring no distal family risk. Data were collected in a longitudinal two-wave design from 161 non-referred and referred children aged three to five years at the onset of the study. All of the children were raised in families of middle to high socio-economic status, i.e. their parents were educated to a middle to high level, had access to the job market and lived together as couples. The four risk domains were assessed at the onset of the study, while EB was rated both at the onset of the study and in the 24-month follow-up. Results confirmed that the four risk domains were each both correlates of EB and efficient at discriminating non-referred from referred children; that their combination regardless of their content (cumulative risk) provided a strong prediction of both later EB and non-referred vs referred sample membership. The results are discussed both for research and clinical purposes.


Enfance | 2009

Évaluer l’activité éducative parentale :Les méthodes se valent-elles ?

Isabelle Roskam; Jean-Christophe Meunier; Caroline Mouton; Émilie Vassart

L’activite parentale d’education a fait l’objet d’une vaste litterature depuis des decennies. Elle a ete mesuree a partir de trois methodes d’evaluation : les observations, les entretiens et les questionnaires. Ces trois methodes comportent un ensemble de caracteristiques propres et de qualites psychometriques guidant le chercheur dans ses choix methodologiques. La presente recherche evalue les relations existant entre les informations obtenues par questionnaire d’une part et par entretien semi-structure d’autre part aupres de 27 meres d’enfants âges de 4 a 12 ans. Les resultats montrent des relations significatives entre les facteurs issus du questionnaire et les categories de codage issues du manuel de codage de l’entretien. Ces relations moderees entre les deux methodes donnent des indications importantes quant a la comparabilite des etudes reposant sur des methodologies differentes et sur la validite ecologique des questionnaires mesurant l’activite parentale d’education.


Journal of Child and Family Studies | 2009

Self-efficacy beliefs amongst parents of young children : validation of a self-report measure

Jean-Christophe Meunier; Isabelle Roskam

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Isabelle Roskam

Université catholique de Louvain

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Gaëlle Van de Moortele

Université catholique de Louvain

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Dillon T. Browne

Ontario Institute for Studies in Education

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Marie-Cécile Nassogne

Cliniques Universitaires Saint-Luc

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Philippe Kinoo

Cliniques Universitaires Saint-Luc

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G. Van de Moortele

Université catholique de Louvain

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Marie-Pascale Noël

Université catholique de Louvain

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Mark Wade

Université catholique de Louvain

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