1. Measuring the Functional Impact of Behavioral Inflexibility in Children with Autism Using the Behavioral Inflexibility Scale: Clinical Interview (BIS-CI)
- Author
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Clare Harrop, Aaron R. Dallman, James W. Bodfish, Richard A. Faldowski, Brian A. Boyd, Sahana Nagabhushan Kalburgi, Luc Lecavalier, and Jill A. Hollway
- Subjects
05 social sciences ,Functional impact ,medicine.disease ,Affect (psychology) ,Exploratory factor analysis ,Family life ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Autism spectrum disorder ,Scale (social sciences) ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Autism ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Reliability (statistics) ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
For individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), behavioral inflexibility can affect multiple domains of functioning and family life. The objective of this study was to develop and validate a clinical interview version of the Behavioral Inflexibility Scale. Trained interviewers conducted interviews with parents of 144 children with ASD and 70 typically developing children (ages: 3–17 years). Using exploratory factor analysis, the Behavioral Inflexibility Scale-Clinical Interview (BIS-CI) was found to be unidimensional. Reliability data indicated the measure was internally consistent (α = 0.80), achieved excellent inter-rater reliability (ICC = 0.97) and test–retest reliability (ICC = 0.87). These findings demonstrate that the BIS-CI is a reliable and valid measure to determine the functional impact of behavioral inflexibility.
- Published
- 2021
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