Research
I WON'T be accepting PhD students in the 2025-26 or 2026-27 admission cycles. Those interested in postdoc positions should click this link: https://sites.uw.edu/cshrb/training-opportunities/postdoctoral-fellowship-in-alcohol-research/
Broadly, my research examines how parent and family factors affect caregiving, family functioning, and children's psychological development and risk for psychopathology. Specifically, my main line of research has two mutually informative domains. First, I am interested in better understanding how and why psychopathology and addiction among parents shapes distinct aspects of parenting. This includes parental cognitions (how parents think about parenting and children's behavior) and parental behavior (how parents interact with their children and navigate distinct parenting challenges and situations). I view parenting as a distinct developmental context through which parents' psychological challenges could dynamically alter children's mental health trajectories.
Second, I am interested in how children's psychological development and well-being are impacted by their parents' mental health and substance use problems. Within this topic, I am curious about how children's risk for and symptoms of psychopathology develop and change over time, and whether there are developmental consequences associated with outcomes that are typically viewed as adaptive or healthy (e.g., resilience). Relatedly, I study the distinct short and long-term psychological benefits and consequences associated with different ways children may cope with caregiver psychopathology and family adversity.
My tertiary interest examines how broader contextual factors, and lived experiences directly and indirectly influence parenting, family functioning, parent/child mental health, and access to treatment resources. This part of my work aims to adopt nuanced, contextually-informed perspectives on how parents and children develop and experience mental health challenges, and how we as social scientists can better address their needs (e.g., through new culturally-informed etiological or ontological models of psychopathology).
I examine these topics across multiple levels of analysis, exploring the unique processes and pathways through which individual, interpersonal, familial, and broader contextual factors may interact (or work in tandem) to promote or hinder psychological well-being in parents and children.
Education
- Psychology of Parenting
- Family Processes in Child Psychopathology
- Developmental Psychology
- April 18, 2024 Debrielle Jacques' project was selected as an alternate by the American Association of University Women (AAUW) Short Term Publications Grant
- April 3, 2024 Debrielle Jacques received funding from the UW Seattle Black Opportunity Fund to complete a manuscript on navigating the PhD program application process
- January 31, 2024 Debrielle Jacques published research on maternal alcohol dependence and childhood reactivity in Development and Psychopathology.
- July 13, 2023 Four UW Psychology professors participated in UW Faculty Field Tour of Washington State
- Jacques, D. T., Sturge-Apple, M. L., Davies, P. T., & Cicchetti, D. (2024). Maternal alcohol dependence symptoms, maternal insensitivity to children’s distress, and young children’s blunted emotional reactivity. Development and Psychopathology, 1–23. doi:10.1017/S0954579424000324
- Lengua, L. J., Gartstein, M. A., Zhou, Q., Colder, C. R., & Jacques, D. T. (2024). Temperament and Child Development in Context. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Sturge-Apple, M.L., Jacques, D.T., Davies, P.T., & Cicchetti, D. (2022). Maternal Power Assertive Discipline and Children’s Adjustment in High-Risk Families: A Social Domain Theory Approach. Journal of Child and Family Studies. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10826-021-02127-7
- Jacques, D. T., Sturge-Apple, M. L., Davies, P. T., & Cicchetti, D. (2021). Parsing alcohol-dependent mothers’ insensitivity to child distress: Longitudinal links with children’s affective and anxiety problems. Developmental Psychology, 57(6), 900-912.
- Jacques D.T., Sturge-Apple M.L., Davies P.T., Cicchetti, D. (2020). Maternal alcohol dependence and harsh caregiving across parenting contexts: The moderating role of child negative emotionality. Development and Psychopathology 32, 1509–1523. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0954579419001445