Developmental Psychopathology

Research group

The Department of Developmental Psychopathology conducts fundamental and applied research on the development of psychopathology and well-being from infancy to early adulthood, focusing on family studies and social interactions. 

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Research projects

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STEPS: Storytelling's Transformative effects on Empathy and Prosocial Skills

This innovative project investigates the effects of storytelling on empathy and prosocial behaviour in children aged 3 to 6 years.

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Alcohol Use in Dutch University Students

This project aims to understand students' drinking motives and investigates (bidirectional) relationships of alcohol use with academic achievement and mental well-being. It uses the longitudinal Healthy Student Life dataset.

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SOSIAL

In this project, the IkPas intervention (one month of no alcohol) will be adjusted to better fit with the social context of students. This will help lower social drinking norms and reduce excessive alcohol consumption among students

Our mission

Our ultimate goal is to understand how children, adolescents, and (young) adults develop across time and in relationships with others and which factors can explain inter- and intra-individual differences. Our ambition is to conduct rigorous research, publish in high-impact scientific journals, present at international conferences, collaborate both nationally and internationally, and communicate our findings to the general public.

Research

Our research focuses on individual, family, parental, and peer factors. Most of our studies use longitudinal designs, enabling us to examine development from micro-level to macro-level scales (days to years). Moreover, we find it essential that our work impacts society. Therefore, we collaborate closely with several youth care institutions, police, municipalities, juvenile prisoners, and addiction care facilities.

Core topics

We have several core topics that we investigate, including internalizing problems (e.g., depressive symptoms and loneliness), externalising problems (e.g., conduct disorder and callous unemotional-traits), eating and lifestyle behaviours, substance use (disorders), well-being, effects of trauma and stressors on development, and the development of prosocial and antisocial behaviours. However, we are not only interested in atypical development because knowledge of typical behaviour is needed to understand why some people adapt better than others. We also study typical behaviour and factors that facilitate resilience and (positive) well-being. 

Methods

We employ a multi-method approach to study these forms of psychopathology and well-being, including longitudinal surveys, qualitative approaches, Experience Sampling Methods (ESM), experiments, hormonal measurements, DNA samples, neuroimaging, and observations. 

Our Team

We are a dynamic team with an open work atmosphere. Our department consists of researchers with different expertise. We collaborate within our group, and outside the department (ranging from within BSI to internationally outstanding collaborations). We strongly believe that Open Science is important, so we increasingly pre-register our studies and share our data and codes. We are strongly motivated to share our findings in practice and society.

Contact information

Visiting address
Thomas Van Aquinostraat 4
6525GD Nijmegen
024-3611822
Postal address
Postbus 9104
6500HE NIJMEGEN