Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Lisanne L. Stone is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Lisanne L. Stone.


BMC Psychology | 2015

The Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire: psychometric properties of the parent and teacher version in children aged 4–7

Lisanne L. Stone; Jan M. A. M. Janssens; Ad A. Vermulst; Marloes van der Maten; Rutger C. M. E. Engels; Roy Otten

BackgroundThe Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire is one of the most employed screening instruments. Although there is a large research body investigating its psychometric properties, reliability and validity are not yet fully tested using modern techniques. Therefore, we investigate reliability, construct validity, measurement invariance, and predictive validity of the parent and teacher version in children aged 4–7. Besides, we intend to replicate previous studies by investigating test-retest reliability and criterion validity.MethodsIn a Dutch community sample 2,238 teachers and 1,513 parents filled out questionnaires regarding problem behaviors and parenting, while 1,831 children reported on sociometric measures at T1. These children were followed-up during three consecutive years. Reliability was examined using Cronbach’s alpha and McDonald’s omega, construct validity was examined by Confirmatory Factor Analysis, and predictive validity was examined by calculating developmental profiles and linking these to measures of inadequate parenting, parenting stress and social preference. Further, mean scores and percentiles were examined in order to establish norms.ResultsOmega was consistently higher than alpha regarding reliability. The original five-factor structure was replicated, and measurement invariance was established on a configural level. Further, higher SDQ scores were associated with future indices of higher inadequate parenting, higher parenting stress and lower social preference. Finally, previous results on test-retest reliability and criterion validity were replicated.ConclusionsThis study is the first to show SDQ scores are predictively valid, attesting to the feasibility of the SDQ as a screening instrument. Future research into predictive validity of the SDQ is warranted.


Journal of Psychopathology and Behavioral Assessment | 2016

The Co-Development of Parenting Stress and Childhood Internalizing and Externalizing Problems

Lisanne L. Stone; Suzanne H. W. Mares; Roy Otten; Rutger C. M. E. Engels; Jan M. A. M. Janssens

Although the detrimental influence of parenting stress on child problem behavior is well established, it remains unknown how these constructs affect each other over time. In accordance with a transactional model, this study investigates how the development of internalizing and externalizing problems is related to the development of parenting stress in children aged 4–9. Mothers of 1582 children participated in three one-year interval data waves. Internalizing and externalizing problems as well as parenting stress were assessed by maternal self-report. Interrelated development of parenting with internalizing and externalizing problems was examined using Latent Growth Modeling. Directionality of effects was further investigated by using cross-lagged models. Parenting stress and externalizing problems showed a decrease over time, whereas internalizing problems remained stable. Initial levels of parenting stress were related to initial levels of both internalizing and externalizing problems. Decreases in parenting stress were related to larger decreases in externalizing problems and to the (stable) course of internalizing problems. Some evidence for reciprocity was found such that externalizing problems were associated with parenting stress and vice versa over time, specifically for boys. Our findings support the transactional model in explaining psychopathology.


International Journal of Behavioral Development | 2013

Does parental psychological control relate to internalizing and externalizing problems in early childhood? An examination using the Berkeley puppet interview

Lisanne L. Stone; Roy Otten; Jan M. A. M. Janssens; Bart Soenens; Emmanuel Kuntsche; Rutger C. M. E. Engels

Parental psychological control has been linked to symptoms of psychopathology in adolescence, yet less is known about its correlates in childhood. The current study is among the first to address whether psychological control is related to internalizing and externalizing problems in early childhood. A community sample of 298 children aged 7.04 (SD = 1.15) years participated. Along with two other parenting dimensions (i.e., responsiveness and behavioural control), psychological control, internalizing and externalizing problems were assessed by means of the Berkeley Puppet Interview. Psychological control was associated with internalizing and externalizing problems, and this association remained significant while controlling for parental behavioural control and responsiveness. Results suggest that the maladaptive correlates of psychological control also manifest in developmental periods prior to adolescence. Still, it is unknown how psychological control and child psychopathology are related over time in childhood.


Journal of Youth and Adolescence | 2017

Video Gaming and Children’s Psychosocial Wellbeing: A Longitudinal Study

Adam Lobel; Rutger C. M. E. Engels; Lisanne L. Stone; William J. Burk; Isabela Granic

The effects of video games on children’s psychosocial development remain the focus of debate. At two timepoints, 1 year apart, 194 children (7.27–11.43 years old; male = 98) reported their gaming frequency, and their tendencies to play violent video games, and to game (a) cooperatively and (b) competitively; likewise, parents reported their children’s psychosocial health. Gaming at time one was associated with increases in emotion problems. Violent gaming was not associated with psychosocial changes. Cooperative gaming was not associated with changes in prosocial behavior. Finally, competitive gaming was associated with decreases in prosocial behavior, but only among children who played video games with high frequency. Thus, gaming frequency was related to increases in internalizing but not externalizing, attention, or peer problems, violent gaming was not associated with increases in externalizing problems, and for children playing approximately 8 h or more per week, frequent competitive gaming may be a risk factor for decreasing prosocial behavior. We argue that replication is needed and that future research should better distinguish between different forms of gaming for more nuanced and generalizable insight.


Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking | 2014

Associations between children's video game playing and psychosocial health: information from both parent and child reports

Adam Lobel; Isabela Granic; Lisanne L. Stone; Rutger C. M. E. Engels

Video games are a highly heterogeneous form of entertainment. As recent reviews highlight, this heterogeneity makes likely that video games have both positive and negative consequences for child development. This study investigated the associations between gaming frequency and psychosocial health among children younger than 12 years of age, an understudied cohort in this field. Both parents and children reported childrens gaming frequency, with parents also reporting on childrens psychosocial health. Given that children may be too young to report the time they spend playing video games accurately, childrens reports were scaffolded by a developmentally appropriate measure. We further investigated the potential bias of having parents report both their childrens gaming frequency and their childrens psychosocial health (i.e., a single source bias). Parental reports of childrens gaming frequency were higher than their childrens reports. However, a direct test of the potential single source bias rendered null results. Notably, however, while parental reports showed negative associations between gaming and psychosocial health, childrens reports showed no associations. Specifically, based on parent reports, childrens gaming was associated with more conduct and peer problems, and less prosocial behavior. As childrens reports produced no associations between gaming and psychosocial health, parental reports in this study may belie an erroneous set of conclusions. We therefore caution against relying on just one reporter when assessing childrens gaming frequency.


Addictive Behaviors | 2015

Alcohol expectancies in young children and how this relates to parental alcohol use

Suzanne H. W. Mares; Lisanne L. Stone; Anna Lichtwarck-Aschoff; Rutger C. M. E. Engels

According to the cognitive model of intergenerational transference, modeling of alcohol use is an indirect process in which parental drinking shapes alcohol expectancies of children, which in turn are associated with later alcohol use in adolescents. The present study examined whether parental alcohol use was related to alcohol expectancies and experimentation with alcohol use in young children. A community sample of 240 children aged 8.02 (SD=1.13) participated. Alcohol expectancies were assessed by means of the Berkeley Puppet Interview. Children reported consistently and reliably on the positive and negative consequences of alcohol use among adults. Their positive and negative expectancies were equally strong. Compared to younger children, older children had more negative and less positive expectancies. For girls, more paternal alcohol use was associated with less negative alcohol expectancies. For older children, more alcohol use of the mother was related to less positive expectancies, while more alcohol use of the father was related to more positive expectancies. The present study showed that young children already have clear ideas about the positive and negative consequences alcohol can have among adults, which can be captured with the Berkeley Puppet Interview. These expectancies are partly associated with alcohol use of their parents.


Psychiatric Services | 2017

Unmet Need for Specialty Mental Health Services Among Children Across Europe

Viviane Kovess-Masfety; Julia Van Engelen; Lisanne L. Stone; Roy Otten; Mauro Giovanni Carta; Adina Bitfoi; Ceren Koç; Dietmar Goelitz; Sigita Lesinskiene; Zlatka Mihova; Christophe Fermanian; Ondine Pez; Mathilde M. Husky

OBJECTIVE The aim of this study was to examine the determinants of use of mental health services for children across Europe, with a specific focus on differences in the availability of mental health resources. METHODS Data were drawn from the School Children Mental Health in Europe Project. Parent- and teacher-reported child mental health status was based on the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire. Sociodemographic characteristics of parents and children, as well as academic performance and use of mental health services in the previous 12 months, were collected. Countries were categorized as having high versus low mental health resources. The sample comprised 4,894 schoolchildren in seven countries. RESULTS Across Europe, only 25.6% of children with a mental disorder had received mental health services in the previous 12 months, including 31.5% in high-resources countries and 18.9% in low-resources countries (p=.001) (N=4,867). The presence of any mental disorder, maternal psychological distress, gender, living in a single-parent home, and low academic performance were determinants of service use. The effect of resources group on the likelihood of receiving services remained significant when the analyses controlled for all predictors (odds ratio=1.41, p<.01). Determinants differed between groups-maternal psychological distress was associated with service use in high-resources countries, and gender was associated with service use in low-resources countries. CONCLUSIONS The findings point to a substantial portion of unmet need across Europe and to major differences in access to care in low- versus high-resources countries. Efforts are needed to address unmet need among children with mental disorders, especially in low-resources countries.


Psychology of popular media culture | 2017

Gaining a Competitive Edge: Longitudinal Associations Between Children’s Competitive Video Game Playing, Conduct Problems, Peer Relations, and Prosocial Behavior.

Adam Lobel; Rutger C. M. E. Engels; Lisanne L. Stone; Isabela Granic

Playful competition is an important hallmark of healthy child development. Playful competition facilitates moral learning, rewards perspective-taking skills, and challenges children to healthily regulate unpleasant emotions such as frustration, anger, and jealousy. Despite this, research on the effects of competitive video gaming has focused on antisocial outcomes, such as declines in prosocial behavior. Moreover, methodological shortcomings such as experimental studies using designs with poor generalizability, and a lack of longitudinal studies, leave open the influence of competitive gaming on social development among preadolescent children. This longitudinal study therefore investigated the relation between competitive gaming and changes in children’s social development across 3 measures: conduct problems, peer relations, and prosocial behavior. At 2 timepoints, 1 year apart, 184 Dutch children (8.31–12.68 years old) reported their gaming frequency and listed their favorite games to play, and their parents reported their children’s psychosocial health. Children’s nominations were coded as including or not including a competitive video game. Children who nominated a competitive game at the first time point were more likely to show a decrease in conduct problems and an improvement in peer relations. No interactions were observed between competitive gaming and gaming frequency. These results encourage future research to investigate the social benefits of playful competitive gaming among peers, and for future studies to take other variables such as violent content, cooperative play, and real world competitive play into account.


Clinical Child and Family Psychology Review | 2010

Psychometric properties of the parent and teacher versions of the strengths and difficulties questionnaire for 4- to 12-year-olds: a review.

Lisanne L. Stone; Roy Otten; Rutger C. M. E. Engels; Ad A. Vermulst; Jan M. A. M. Janssens


European Journal of Psychological Assessment | 2013

The Parent Version of the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire. Omega as an Alternative to Alpha and a Test for Measurement Invariance

Lisanne L. Stone; Roy Otten; L. Ringlever; J.M. Hiemstra; Rutger C. M. E. Engels; Ad A. Vermulst; Jan M. A. M. Janssens

Collaboration


Dive into the Lisanne L. Stone's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Roy Otten

Radboud University Nijmegen

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ad A. Vermulst

Radboud University Nijmegen

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Isabela Granic

Radboud University Nijmegen

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Adam Lobel

Radboud University Nijmegen

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Rowella Kuijpers

Radboud University Nijmegen

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge