J
Jocelyne Clench-Aas
Researcher at Norwegian Institute of Public Health
Publications - 42
Citations - 1614
Jocelyne Clench-Aas is an academic researcher from Norwegian Institute of Public Health. The author has contributed to research in topics: Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire & Population. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 42 publications receiving 1406 citations.
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Construct validity of the five-factor Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ) in pre-, early, and late adolescence
TL;DR: Support for the proposed five-factor structure of the SDQ is indicated across a wide age range (10-19years), including older adolescents and different informants, however, some improvements should be considered to improve internal reliability and conceptual clarity.
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The Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire in the Nordic countries
Carsten Obel,Einar Heiervang,Alina Rodriguez,Sonja Heyerdahl,Hans Smedje,Andre Sourander,Olafur O Guethmundsson,Jocelyne Clench-Aas,Else Christensen,Frode Heian,Kristin S Mathiesen,Páll Magnússon,Urethur Njarethvík,Merja Koskelainen,John A. Rønning,Kjell Morten Stormark,Jørn Olsen +16 more
TL;DR: The descriptive statistics suggest that the distributions of SDQ scores are very similar across the Nordic countries, and further collaborative efforts in establishing norms and evaluating the validity of the SDQ as a screening instrument are encouraged.
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Understanding discrepancies in parent-child reporting of emotional and behavioural problems: Effects of relational and socio-demographic factors
TL;DR: Investigation of highly discrepant subgroups showed that, when children reported the most symptoms and impact, qualitative aspects of the parent-child relationship and family structure seemed to be more powerful predictors of disagreement than were gender of the child and socio-demographic variables.
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Self-reported strengths and difficulties in a large Norwegian population 10-19 years : age and gender specific results of the extended SDQ-questionnaire.
TL;DR: The results suggested that SDQ could be a valuable screening instrument for older adolescents and strongly associated with perceived difficulties, impact and burden to others with significant gender and age effects.
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Dimensionality and measurement invariance in the Satisfaction with Life Scale in Norway
TL;DR: The results in this Norwegian study seem to confirm that a unidimensional structure is acceptable, but that a modified single-factor model with correlations between error terms of items 4 and 5 is preferred.