Elaboration d’une version courte de l’« Inventory of Parental Representations » pour l’évaluation de l’attachement à l’adolescence

2020 ◽  
Vol 68 (1) ◽  
pp. 62
Author(s):  
M. Lamourette ◽  
F. Ligier ◽  
F. Guillemin ◽  
J. Epstein
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marilou Lamourette ◽  
Fabienne Ligier ◽  
Francis Guillemin ◽  
Jonathan Epstein

Abstract Background: The Inventory of Parental Representations (IPR), a self-administered questionnaire, was developed primarily to identify styles of attachment in adolescence. However, it did not present stable psychometric properties in the various American studies carried out. The aim of this study was to adapt the IPR in French and to provide a shorter version with improved psychometric properties and a sound content.Methods: The content validity was carried out by an expert committee and 10 adolescents. The study of the metric properties of the French version of the IPR was realized in a sample of 275 responses. In case of mediocre results in the CFA of the existing structures, the development of a new IPR structure was planned (Classical Test Theory and Rasch Modelling).Results: Out of 62 items translated, 13 needed adaptation. The analysis of its metric properties produced mediocre results. In a group of 275 adolescent’s responses, a step-by-step process was implemented. Content and psychometric property analyses generated a paternal Short-IPRF (15 items) and a maternal Short-IPRM (16 items) scale with sound content and good psychometric properties confirmed in an independent sample of 795 responses (Short-IPRF: Comparative Fit Index (CFI)=0.987, Tucker-Lewis Index (TLI)=0.982, Root Mean Square Error of Approximation (RMSEA)=0.027; Short-IPRM: CFI=0.953, TLI=0.927, RMSEA=0.068). Using Rasch modelling, the attachment was correctly measured overall especially for insecure attachment. Conclusions: A step-by-step process involving both content analysis and psychometric property analysis led to the generation of two questionnaires, a paternal scale, the Short-IPRF, and a maternal scale, the Short-IPRM.


2010 ◽  
Vol 49 (1) ◽  
pp. 92-108 ◽  
Author(s):  
STEPHANIE STADELMANN ◽  
SONJA PERREN ◽  
MAUREEN GROEBEN ◽  
KAI Von KLITZING

2014 ◽  
Vol 38 (2) ◽  
pp. 164-173 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sara Meyer ◽  
H. Abigail Raikes ◽  
Elita A. Virmani ◽  
Sara Waters ◽  
Ross A. Thompson

There is considerable knowledge of parental socialization processes that directly and indirectly influence the development of children’s emotion self-regulation, but little understanding of the specific beliefs and values that underlie parents’ socialization approaches. This study examined multiple aspects of parents’ self-reported emotion representations and their associations with parents’ strategies for managing children’s negative emotions and children’s emotion self-regulatory behaviors. The sample consisted of 73 mothers of 4–5-year-old children; the sample was ethnically diverse. Two aspects of parents’ beliefs about emotion – the importance of attention to/acceptance of emotional reactions, and the value of emotion self-regulation – were associated with both socialization strategies and children’s self-regulation. Furthermore, in mediational models, the association of parental representations with children’s emotion regulation was mediated by constructive socialization strategies. These findings are among the first to highlight the specific kinds of emotion representations that are associated with parents’ emotion socialization, and their importance to family processes shaping children’s emotional development.


2014 ◽  
Vol 24 (10) ◽  
pp. 2905-2913 ◽  
Author(s):  
Renata Tambelli ◽  
Valentina Notari ◽  
Odorisio Flaminia ◽  
Fiorenzo Laghi

1990 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 613-620 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peggy T. Cohen-Kettenis ◽  
Willem A. Arrindell

SynopsisThe parental representations of male-to-female and female-to-male transsexuals were rated using the EMBU inventory. Scores on the measure were compared against ratings returned by controls of similar biological sex, matched on age, educational level and number of female siblings in an ANCOVA design. In line with previous findings by Parker & Barr (1982), who studied male-to-female transsexuals only, these patients were found not to differ from the male controls in their scoring of their mothers, but did score their fathers as less emotionally warm, more rejecting and more protective. Extending the findings by Parker & Barr (1982), female-to-male transsexuals rated both parents as more rejecting and less emotionally warm, but only their mothers as more protective than their female control equivalents rated theirs. Parental divorce distinguished both patient groups from controls, although further analyses revealed this not to imply more parental absence in patients than in controls. Male and female transsexuals differed from each other in some respects (e.g. lower scores on parental emotional warmth and higher scores on maternal rejection for the female patients), while being comparable in other respects (e.g. parental divorce).


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