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Auteur Sébastien NORMAND
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Documents disponibles écrits par cet auteur (3)
Faire une suggestion Affiner la rechercheL'incidence du TDA/H sur les relations d'amitié des enfants et adolescents : mieux comprendre pour mieux intervenir / Marie Michèle SOUCISSE in Nouvelle Revue de l'AIS (La), 68 (Janvier 2015)
[article]
Titre : L'incidence du TDA/H sur les relations d'amitié des enfants et adolescents : mieux comprendre pour mieux intervenir Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Marie Michèle SOUCISSE, Auteur ; Marie-France MAISONNEUVE, Auteur ; Sébastien NORMAND, Auteur Année de publication : 2015 Article en page(s) : p. 111-131 Langues : Français (fre) Mots-clés : Adaptation sociale Interventions cliniques Relations de pairs Relations d’amitié TDA/H Index. décimale : PER Périodiques Résumé : Les enfants et les adolescents avec le Trouble du déficit de l’attention/hyperactivité (TDA/H) éprouvent des difficultés importantes dans leurs relations d’amitié. Dans le présent article, nous décrivons l’importance développementale des relations d’amitié dyadiques et résumons de façon critique la nature multidimensionnelle des défis reliés à l’amitié vécus par les jeunes avec TDA/H. Au moins la moitié des enfants avec TDA/H n’ont aucun ami. Ceux qui ont un ami s’associent plus souvent avec d’autres jeunes avec TDA/H et forment des relations de moindre qualité et de plus courte durée. Ces difficultés sont souvent persistantes jusqu’à l’adolescence et sont réfractaires aux traitements présentement disponibles. Nous concluons par une discussion des implications et des directions futures pour l’intervention et la recherche clinique. Permalink : https://www.cra-rhone-alpes.org/cid/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=254
in Nouvelle Revue de l'AIS (La) > 68 (Janvier 2015) . - p. 111-131[article] L'incidence du TDA/H sur les relations d'amitié des enfants et adolescents : mieux comprendre pour mieux intervenir [texte imprimé] / Marie Michèle SOUCISSE, Auteur ; Marie-France MAISONNEUVE, Auteur ; Sébastien NORMAND, Auteur . - 2015 . - p. 111-131.
Langues : Français (fre)
in Nouvelle Revue de l'AIS (La) > 68 (Janvier 2015) . - p. 111-131
Mots-clés : Adaptation sociale Interventions cliniques Relations de pairs Relations d’amitié TDA/H Index. décimale : PER Périodiques Résumé : Les enfants et les adolescents avec le Trouble du déficit de l’attention/hyperactivité (TDA/H) éprouvent des difficultés importantes dans leurs relations d’amitié. Dans le présent article, nous décrivons l’importance développementale des relations d’amitié dyadiques et résumons de façon critique la nature multidimensionnelle des défis reliés à l’amitié vécus par les jeunes avec TDA/H. Au moins la moitié des enfants avec TDA/H n’ont aucun ami. Ceux qui ont un ami s’associent plus souvent avec d’autres jeunes avec TDA/H et forment des relations de moindre qualité et de plus courte durée. Ces difficultés sont souvent persistantes jusqu’à l’adolescence et sont réfractaires aux traitements présentement disponibles. Nous concluons par une discussion des implications et des directions futures pour l’intervention et la recherche clinique. Permalink : https://www.cra-rhone-alpes.org/cid/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=254 Peer contagion dynamics in the friendships of children with ADHD / Sébastien NORMAND in Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 63-12 (December 2022)
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[article]
Titre : Peer contagion dynamics in the friendships of children with ADHD Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Sébastien NORMAND, Auteur ; Maude LAMBERT, Auteur ; Joanna GUIET, Auteur ; Mara BRENDGEN, Auteur ; Roger BAKEMAN, Auteur ; Amori Yee MIKAMI, Auteur Article en page(s) : p.1477-1485 Langues : Anglais (eng) Mots-clés : Child Male Humans Female Friends/psychology Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity/psychology Interpersonal Relations Peer Group Aggression Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder coercive joining dyadic mutuality peer contagion sequential analysis Index. décimale : PER Périodiques Résumé : BACKGROUND: Friendships in middle childhood carry high developmental significance. The majority of children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) have few friendships, unstable friendships, or poor relationship quality in any friendships they have. The current study used time-window sequential analysis to map the dynamics within the friendships of children with ADHD, specifically the peer contagion processes of dyadic mutuality and coercive joining. METHODS: Participants were 164 dyads consisting of a target child with ADHD and peer problems (age 6-11 years; 68% male; and 73% white) and a reciprocated friend. Dyads were observed in the lab during a cooperative task eliciting verbal negotiation processes to decide how to share a limited resource and during a fast-paced, engrossing, and competitive task. Both tasks were designed to mirror the real-world interactions of friends. Sequences of dyadic mutuality (i.e., reciprocity of positive affect and positive behaviors) and coercive joining (i.e., reciprocity of aggressive, controlling, and rule-breaking behaviors) between target children and friends were coded. RESULTS: Regarding dyadic mutuality, target children reciprocated their friends' positive affect in both tasks. They also reciprocated their friends' positive behaviors but only in the cooperative task. In contrast, they only reciprocated their friends' coercive joining behaviors in the competitive task. Medium to large reciprocity effects was found for 36%-53% (dyadic mutuality) and 38%-55% (coercive joining) of target children. CONCLUSIONS: These results extend findings of peer contagion processes to the friendships of children with ADHD and suggest that contagion may vary according to interaction context (i.e., competition vs. cooperation). Understanding the spread of peer contagion may illuminate how children with ADHD and their friends influence each other's adjustment over time and may guide friendship-focused psychosocial interventions for this population. En ligne : http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jcpp.13597 Permalink : https://www.cra-rhone-alpes.org/cid/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=490
in Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry > 63-12 (December 2022) . - p.1477-1485[article] Peer contagion dynamics in the friendships of children with ADHD [texte imprimé] / Sébastien NORMAND, Auteur ; Maude LAMBERT, Auteur ; Joanna GUIET, Auteur ; Mara BRENDGEN, Auteur ; Roger BAKEMAN, Auteur ; Amori Yee MIKAMI, Auteur . - p.1477-1485.
Langues : Anglais (eng)
in Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry > 63-12 (December 2022) . - p.1477-1485
Mots-clés : Child Male Humans Female Friends/psychology Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity/psychology Interpersonal Relations Peer Group Aggression Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder coercive joining dyadic mutuality peer contagion sequential analysis Index. décimale : PER Périodiques Résumé : BACKGROUND: Friendships in middle childhood carry high developmental significance. The majority of children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) have few friendships, unstable friendships, or poor relationship quality in any friendships they have. The current study used time-window sequential analysis to map the dynamics within the friendships of children with ADHD, specifically the peer contagion processes of dyadic mutuality and coercive joining. METHODS: Participants were 164 dyads consisting of a target child with ADHD and peer problems (age 6-11 years; 68% male; and 73% white) and a reciprocated friend. Dyads were observed in the lab during a cooperative task eliciting verbal negotiation processes to decide how to share a limited resource and during a fast-paced, engrossing, and competitive task. Both tasks were designed to mirror the real-world interactions of friends. Sequences of dyadic mutuality (i.e., reciprocity of positive affect and positive behaviors) and coercive joining (i.e., reciprocity of aggressive, controlling, and rule-breaking behaviors) between target children and friends were coded. RESULTS: Regarding dyadic mutuality, target children reciprocated their friends' positive affect in both tasks. They also reciprocated their friends' positive behaviors but only in the cooperative task. In contrast, they only reciprocated their friends' coercive joining behaviors in the competitive task. Medium to large reciprocity effects was found for 36%-53% (dyadic mutuality) and 38%-55% (coercive joining) of target children. CONCLUSIONS: These results extend findings of peer contagion processes to the friendships of children with ADHD and suggest that contagion may vary according to interaction context (i.e., competition vs. cooperation). Understanding the spread of peer contagion may illuminate how children with ADHD and their friends influence each other's adjustment over time and may guide friendship-focused psychosocial interventions for this population. En ligne : http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jcpp.13597 Permalink : https://www.cra-rhone-alpes.org/cid/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=490 Research Review: Mechanisms of change and between-family differences in parenting interventions for children with ADHD - an individual participant data meta-analysis / Constantina PSYLLOU in Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 66-9 (September 2025)
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[article]
Titre : Research Review: Mechanisms of change and between-family differences in parenting interventions for children with ADHD - an individual participant data meta-analysis Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Constantina PSYLLOU, Auteur ; Marjolein LUMAN, Auteur ; Barbara J. VAN DEN HOOFDAKKER, Auteur ; Saskia VAN DER OORD, Auteur ; Asma AGHEBATI, Auteur ; Bianca E. BOYER, Auteur ; Jan K. BUITELAAR, Auteur ; Andrea CHRONIS-TUSCANO, Auteur ; David DALEY, Auteur ; Tycho J. DEKKERS, Auteur ; George J. DUPAUL, Auteur ; Gregory A. FABIANO, Auteur ; Maite FERRIN, Auteur ; Nike FRANKE, Auteur ; Naama Gershy TSAHOR, Auteur ; Elizabeth A. HARVEY, Auteur ; Timo HENNIG, Auteur ; Sharonne HERBERT, Auteur ; Pieter J. HOEKSTRA, Auteur ; Lee KERN, Auteur ; Jennifer A. MAUTONE, Auteur ; Amori Yee MIKAMI, Auteur ; Sébastien NORMAND, Auteur ; Linda J. PFIFFNER, Auteur ; Shizuka SHIMABUKURO, Auteur ; Satyam Antonio SCHRAMM, Auteur ; Julie B. SCHWEITZER, Auteur ; Margaret H. SIBLEY, Auteur ; Edmund SONUGA-BARKE, Auteur ; Catherine THOMPSON, Auteur ; Margaret J. THOMPSON, Auteur ; Gail TRIPP, Auteur ; Carolyn WEBSTER-STRATTON, Auteur ; Yuhuan XIE, Auteur ; Patty LEIJTEN, Auteur ; Annabeth P. GROENMAN, Auteur Article en page(s) : p.1304-1319 Langues : Anglais (eng) Mots-clés : Parent training ADHD parenting meta-analysis structural equation modelling Index. décimale : PER Périodiques Résumé : Background Understanding the mechanisms of change and between-family differences in behavioural parenting interventions for children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) may help personalise interventions. Therefore, we examined whether improvements in parenting are associated with changes in child behaviour and functional outcomes, and how these associations vary based on parents' baseline parenting levels. Methods We collected individual participant data including 19 randomised controlled trials focusing on children with ADHD (n 1,720). Immediate post-intervention measures of child ADHD and oppositional behaviour severity, reported by parents and functional impairment reported by either the parent or probably masked clinicians, were treated as outcomes. We estimated pathways from intervention (vs. control) to child outcomes, via immediate post-intervention parent reports of constructive parenting (e.g. praise), non-constructive parenting (e.g. physical punishment) and parent?child affection (e.g. warmth), while controlling for baseline values of both child outcomes and parenting levels. Baseline values of each parenting variable were used as moderators of the mediated pathways. Results Improvements in parenting behaviours and parent?child affection immediately following the intervention jointly explained concurrent improvements in children's ADHD severity, oppositional behaviour and functional impairment. Furthermore, when reversing the direction of the pathways, improvements in all child outcomes jointly explained improvements in each aspect of parenting. Improvements in non-constructive parenting and parent?child affection uniquely accounted for intervention effects on functional impairment, especially for families with higher baseline levels of non-constructive parenting. Conclusions Our findings might indicate that improvements in both the behavioural and affective aspects of parenting are associated with concurrent reductions in child behaviour problems and functional impairment. However, more research is necessary to explore the potential causal directionality between parenting and child outcomes. Nonetheless, supporting families with poorer parenting skills may be especially important, as reductions in non-constructive parenting in these families are linked to stronger treatment effects on child functional impairment. En ligne : https://doi.org/10.1111/jcpp.14120 Permalink : https://www.cra-rhone-alpes.org/cid/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=566
in Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry > 66-9 (September 2025) . - p.1304-1319[article] Research Review: Mechanisms of change and between-family differences in parenting interventions for children with ADHD - an individual participant data meta-analysis [texte imprimé] / Constantina PSYLLOU, Auteur ; Marjolein LUMAN, Auteur ; Barbara J. VAN DEN HOOFDAKKER, Auteur ; Saskia VAN DER OORD, Auteur ; Asma AGHEBATI, Auteur ; Bianca E. BOYER, Auteur ; Jan K. BUITELAAR, Auteur ; Andrea CHRONIS-TUSCANO, Auteur ; David DALEY, Auteur ; Tycho J. DEKKERS, Auteur ; George J. DUPAUL, Auteur ; Gregory A. FABIANO, Auteur ; Maite FERRIN, Auteur ; Nike FRANKE, Auteur ; Naama Gershy TSAHOR, Auteur ; Elizabeth A. HARVEY, Auteur ; Timo HENNIG, Auteur ; Sharonne HERBERT, Auteur ; Pieter J. HOEKSTRA, Auteur ; Lee KERN, Auteur ; Jennifer A. MAUTONE, Auteur ; Amori Yee MIKAMI, Auteur ; Sébastien NORMAND, Auteur ; Linda J. PFIFFNER, Auteur ; Shizuka SHIMABUKURO, Auteur ; Satyam Antonio SCHRAMM, Auteur ; Julie B. SCHWEITZER, Auteur ; Margaret H. SIBLEY, Auteur ; Edmund SONUGA-BARKE, Auteur ; Catherine THOMPSON, Auteur ; Margaret J. THOMPSON, Auteur ; Gail TRIPP, Auteur ; Carolyn WEBSTER-STRATTON, Auteur ; Yuhuan XIE, Auteur ; Patty LEIJTEN, Auteur ; Annabeth P. GROENMAN, Auteur . - p.1304-1319.
Langues : Anglais (eng)
in Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry > 66-9 (September 2025) . - p.1304-1319
Mots-clés : Parent training ADHD parenting meta-analysis structural equation modelling Index. décimale : PER Périodiques Résumé : Background Understanding the mechanisms of change and between-family differences in behavioural parenting interventions for children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) may help personalise interventions. Therefore, we examined whether improvements in parenting are associated with changes in child behaviour and functional outcomes, and how these associations vary based on parents' baseline parenting levels. Methods We collected individual participant data including 19 randomised controlled trials focusing on children with ADHD (n 1,720). Immediate post-intervention measures of child ADHD and oppositional behaviour severity, reported by parents and functional impairment reported by either the parent or probably masked clinicians, were treated as outcomes. We estimated pathways from intervention (vs. control) to child outcomes, via immediate post-intervention parent reports of constructive parenting (e.g. praise), non-constructive parenting (e.g. physical punishment) and parent?child affection (e.g. warmth), while controlling for baseline values of both child outcomes and parenting levels. Baseline values of each parenting variable were used as moderators of the mediated pathways. Results Improvements in parenting behaviours and parent?child affection immediately following the intervention jointly explained concurrent improvements in children's ADHD severity, oppositional behaviour and functional impairment. Furthermore, when reversing the direction of the pathways, improvements in all child outcomes jointly explained improvements in each aspect of parenting. Improvements in non-constructive parenting and parent?child affection uniquely accounted for intervention effects on functional impairment, especially for families with higher baseline levels of non-constructive parenting. Conclusions Our findings might indicate that improvements in both the behavioural and affective aspects of parenting are associated with concurrent reductions in child behaviour problems and functional impairment. However, more research is necessary to explore the potential causal directionality between parenting and child outcomes. Nonetheless, supporting families with poorer parenting skills may be especially important, as reductions in non-constructive parenting in these families are linked to stronger treatment effects on child functional impairment. En ligne : https://doi.org/10.1111/jcpp.14120 Permalink : https://www.cra-rhone-alpes.org/cid/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=566

