1. The Oxford Positive Self Scale: psychometric development of an assessment of cognitions associated with psychological well-being.
- Author
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Freeman, Daniel, Rosebrock, Laina, Loe, Bao S., Saidel, Simone, Freeman, Jason, and Waite, Felicity
- Subjects
WELL-being ,EXPERIMENTAL design ,STRUCTURAL equation modeling ,STATISTICAL reliability ,SELF-perception ,RESEARCH methodology ,RESEARCH methodology evaluation ,PSYCHOMETRICS ,SURVEYS ,FACTOR analysis ,CHI-squared test ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,COGNITIVE testing ,STATISTICAL sampling ,RECEIVER operating characteristic curves ,OPTIMISM ,SELF-esteem testing - Abstract
Background: Developing, elaborating, and consolidating positive views of the self is a plausible route to increased psychological well-being. We set out to provide an assessment of positive self-beliefs that could be used in research and clinical practice. Methods: A non-probability online survey was conducted with 2500 UK adults, quota sampled to match the population for age, gender, ethnicity, income, and region. Exploratory factor analysis of a 94-item pool – generated with guidance from people with lived experience of mental health difficulties – was conducted to develop the Oxford Positive Self Scale (OxPos). The item pool was further reduced using regularised structural equation modelling (SEM) before confirmatory factor analysis. Optimal cut-off scores were developed using receiver operating characteristic curves. Additional validations were carried out with two further general population cohorts (n = 1399; n = 1693). Results: A 24-item scale was developed with an excellent model fit [robust χ
2 = 995.676; df = 246; CFI = 0.956; TLI = 0.951; RMSEA = 0.049 (0.047, 0.052); SRMR = 0.031]. The scale comprises four factors: mastery; strength; enjoyment; and character. SEM indicated that the scale explains 68.6% of variance in psychological well-being. The OxPos score was negatively correlated with depression (r = −0.49), anxious avoidance (r = −0.34), paranoia (r = −0.23), hallucinations (r = −0.20), and negative self-beliefs (r = −0.50), and positively correlated with psychological well-being (r = 0.79), self-esteem (r = 0.67), and positive social comparison (r = 0.72). Internal reliability and test–retest reliability were excellent. Cut-offs by age and gender were generated. A short-form was developed, explaining 96% of the full-scale variance. Conclusions: The new open access scale provides a psychometrically robust assessment of positive cognitions that are strongly connected to psychological well-being. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
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