62,910 results on '"confirmatory factor analysis"'
Search Results
2. Validation of the Turkish Version of the Professional Fulfillment Index
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Eksioglu, Merve, Koca, Ayca, Azapoglu Kaymak, Burcu, Cimilli Ozturk, Tuba, and Elhan, Atilla Halil
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confirmatory factor analysis ,exploratory factor analysis ,burnout ,resilience ,Emergency Medicine ,professional fulfillment ,validation study - Abstract
Introduction: Clinician burnout represents a significant occupational hazard among physicians, with a notably high prevalence among emergency physicians. The Stanford Professional Fulfillment Index (PFI) was developed to comprehensively assess various aspects of doctors’ work experiences, including professional fulfillment. In this study we aimed to validate the Turkish version of the PFI (T-PFI), a 16-item instrument designed to measure physicians’ professional fulfillment and burnout.Methods: In this cross-sectional study, we validated the T-PFI in two phases. The initial phase involved translating and culturally adapting the original PFI into Turkish. We evaluated the content validity of the translated version using item and scale content validity indices (I-CVI and S-CVI, respectively). The validated T-PFI was then distributed among a broad cohort of emergency physicians via an online survey to further assess its reliability and validity. The assessment tools included Cronbach α, confirmatory factor analysis, and content validity indices.Results: Of 1,434 physicians who were sent the survey, 425 fully completed it (29.6%). There was an almost equal distribution of 215 females and 210 males. Only 9.6% of the participants reported high levels of professional fulfillment, whereas a significant majority (79.1%) were susceptible to burnout. The Cronbach α values for the professional fulfillment and overall burnout scales were 0.87 and 0.90, respectively. The content validity was confirmed by I-CVI values exceeding 0.80 and an S-CVI/average relevance of 0.92. The confirmatory factor analysis demonstrated an acceptable model fit after adjustments.Conclusion: The T-PFI is a reliable and valid tool for assessing professional fulfillment and burnout among emergency physicians in Turkey. Effective interventions to mitigate burnout are essential to improve physician well-being in Turkish healthcare settings.
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- 2024
3. Initial Development and Validation of the Campus Recreation Constraints and Negotiations Questionnaire.
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Newsome, A'Naja M., Garcia, Jeanette M., and Dedrick, Robert F.
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CONFIRMATORY factor analysis ,EXPLORATORY factor analysis ,LEISURE ,PSYCHOMETRICS ,FACTOR analysis ,STUDENT engagement - Abstract
Despite the known benefits of campus recreation participation, many students do not engage with the programs and services offered on college campuses. College students report factors that constrain leisure time physical activity within the context of campus recreation. Examining the constraints and negotiation strategies of college students specific to the use of campus recreation facilities and programs is understudied and lacks validated instruments. The purpose of this study was to develop and report initial validity and reliability of the Campus Recreation Constraints and Negotiation Questionnaire. Exploratory factor analysis and confirmatory factor analysis were used to evaluate two independent scales. Psychometric properties including construct validity, internal structure, and reliability are reported from two different samples of college students. Practical implications for campus recreation programming and marketing efforts are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Validation of the Portuguese Version of the Perceived Physical Literacy Instrument.
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Boldovskaia, Aia, Teixeira, Diogo S., Silva, Marlene N., and Carraça, Eliana V.
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PHYSICS instruments ,PORTUGUESE language ,STANDARD deviations ,CONFIRMATORY factor analysis ,PSYCHOMETRICS - Abstract
Background: The Perceived Physical Literacy Instrument (PPLI) has been the most adopted physical literacy instrument designed for adults to date, having been already translated to 5 languages. Still, despite its popularity, there is limited evidence of its psychometric properties. The aim of this study was to translate and adapt cross-culturally the PPLI to the Portuguese language and to analyze the psychometric properties of the Portuguese version in a sample of Portuguese-speaking adults. Methods: The study sample was composed of 434 participants (70% females) with a median age of 25 (18–39) years. Confirmatory factor analysis was used to assess psychometric properties of the scale. In addition, instrument assumptions between sexes through invariance testing were examined. Finally, concurrent validity, test–retest reliability, and test–retest agreement analyses were performed to gather additional evidence. Results: The results of the present study generally supported the measurement model. The 9-item, 3-factor model presented a good fit to the data and adequate construct validity (χ
2 = 82.859 [24], P <.001, comparative-fit index =.948, Tucker–Lewis index =.922, standardized root mean square residual =.049, root mean square error of approximation =.075). In addition, the scale presented concurrent validity. Some issues arose with measurement invariance and overtime consistency. Conclusions: Considering the lack of validated instruments, we suggest a fair use of Portuguese version of PPLI to access physical literacy in adults. This study contributes to the validation of the PPLI by providing evidence of its psychometric properties in the Portuguese-speaking adult population and facilitates comparative analysis with previous and future studies utilizing the PPLI instrument. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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5. Cross-Cultural Adaptation and Psychometric Properties of the Persian Version of the Life Skills Scale for Physical Education.
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Vahdani, Mohsen, Cronin, Lorcan, and Rezasoltani, Najmeh
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LIFE skills ,PSYCHOMETRICS ,PHYSICAL education ,CONFIRMATORY factor analysis ,TEST validity ,EDUCATION students - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this research was to develop and assess the psychometric properties of the Persian version of the Life Skills Scale for Physical Education (P-LSSPE). Method: During Study 1, which included four translators, eight physical education experts, and 45 physical education students, the LSSPE was translated and adapted into Persian, and its content validity was assessed. Study 2 assessed evidence for the factorial validity and reliability of the scale with a sample of 1,004 students. Study 3, which included 462 students, assessed nomological validity evidence. Results: In Study 1, the content validity analyses indicated that the P-LSSPE items and their dimensions were clear in language, practical in application, and represented the life skills in question. In Study 2, a bifactor confirmatory factor analysis model was the best representation of the data and provided evidence for the construct validity of the scale. In Study 3, evidence for the nomological validity of the P-LSSPE was provided, with the correlation coefficients indicating that teacher autonomy support was associated with students' development of all eight life skills and total life skills. Discussion/Conclusion: Overall, the findings of this research suggest that the P-LSSPE can be used to accurately measure the life skills development of Iranian physical education students. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Development and Validation of the Greek Version of Weight Pressures in Sport—Females Questionnaire.
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Kontele, Ioanna, Vassilakou, Tonia, Psychountaki, Maria, Reel, Justine J., and Donti, Olyvia
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OLDER athletes ,COACH-athlete relationships ,EXPLORATORY factor analysis ,CONFIRMATORY factor analysis ,WOMEN athletes ,FACTOR structure - Abstract
Weight Pressures in Sport—Females (WPS-F) questionnaire measures sport-related pressures that female athletes experience regarding body weight, shape, size, and appearance. In order to examine the psychometric properties of the Greek version of the inventory, two different studies were conducted. In the first study, using a sample (n = 225) of female Greek athletes aged 12–20 years, exploratory factor analysis produced two factors (Factor 1: Pressures From Coaches and Sports About Weight and Factor 2: Pressures Regarding Appearance and Performance) and supported the original factor structure. In the second study, using a different sample (n = 318) of female Greek athletes aged 11–18 years, confirmatory factor analysis provided support for the two-factor structure. Weight Pressures in Sport—Females questionnaire was demonstrated to be a valid and reliable instrument for Greek female athletic populations. Future studies should further test the factorial structure in younger and older athletes and in larger samples. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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7. The Influence of Athletes' Psychological Needs on Motivation, Burnout, and Well-Being: A Test of Self-Determination Theory.
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Shannon, Stephen, Brick, Noel, Prentice, Garry, and Breslin, Gavin
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SELF-determination theory ,MASLACH Burnout Inventory ,PSYCHOLOGICAL burnout ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,WELL-being ,CONFIRMATORY factor analysis ,MENTAL health - Abstract
Sport provides a significant role in the lives of athletes; however, both positive and negative mental health effects may occur from sporting experiences, including burnout and/or well-being. A cross-sectional survey was conducted including 685 athletes (M
age = 23.39, SD = 6.22, 71% = male), testing multiple, complementary, self-determination theory hypotheses linked to well-being, and burnout. A multistage modeling approach encompassing confirmatory factor and path analysis was utilized, with results showing significant variance explained for well-being (R2 =.30) and burnout (R2 =.35). Several direct effects were found in line with self-determination theory, including between; needs-support and needs-satisfaction (β = 0.48), and needs-control and needs-frustration (β = 0.44); needs-satisfaction and motivational orientation (β = 0.25); needs-satisfaction and well-being (β = 0.37), and needs frustration and burnout (β = 0.25); and motivational orientation and burnout (β = −0.27), and motivational orientation and well-being (β = 0.18). Indirect effects were found for well-being and burnout via coach needs-support, needs-satisfaction, and motivational orientation in sequence (β = 0.24 and β = −0.22, respectively), in addition to burnout via coach needs-control, needs frustration, and motivational orientation in sequence (β = −0.12). To conclude, coach-based, sporting mental health interventions that promote the utilization of needs-supportive behaviors, while also highlighting the need to minimize needs-controlling behaviors, are recommended for the prevention of burnout and the promotion of well-being in athletes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
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8. Cross-Cultural Adaptation of the Urdu Version of Rosenbaum Concussion Knowledge and Attitude Survey—Student Version in Pakistan.
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Mahfooz, Masood, Noh, Young-Eun, and Teo, Eng Wah
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BRAIN concussion ,CONFIRMATORY factor analysis ,PSYCHOMETRICS ,FACTOR structure ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) - Abstract
Evaluating athletes' knowledge of and attitudes toward sports-related concussions is important. However, there is limited research involving South Asian athletes, partly due to the lack of a valid and reliable tool. This study, therefore, aimed to translate and validate the Rosenbaum Concussion Knowledge and Attitude Survey—Student Version, an established tool used to measure knowledge and attitude toward concussion, into Urdu. Rosenbaum Concussion Knowledge and Attitude Survey—Student Version was translated into Urdu using the standard guidelines and then completed by 369 athletes participating in contact sports at different universities in Pakistan. Confirmatory factor analysis was performed on the Concussion Attitude Index items to examine the underlying factorial structure. Construct validity of Concussion Attitude Index factors was also investigated using convergent and discriminant validity. The results showed that the Urdu version of the Rosenbaum Concussion Knowledge and Attitude Survey—Student Version has good psychometric properties and is a valid and reliable tool for evaluating Urdu-speaking athletes' knowledge of and attitudes toward concussions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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9. Psychometric Assessment of the Mental Health Continuum-Short Form in Athletes: A Bifactor Modeling Approach.
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Shannon, Stephen, Shevlin, Mark, and Breslin, Gavin
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MENTAL health ,ATHLETES' health ,PSYCHOMETRICS ,OLDER athletes ,WELL-being ,PSYCHOLOGICAL well-being ,CONSENSUS (Social sciences) - Abstract
Aim: A recent mental health in sport consensus statement advocates Keyes' two continua model with an associated Mental Health Continuum (MHC) instrument to assess mental health in athletes. However, there remains statistically inconsistent usage of the MHC in athletes, so further exploration of the MHC's psychometric factors is required. Methods: Athletes (N = 1,097) aged 32.63 (SD = 11.16) comprising 603 females (55.7%) and 478 males (44.3%), completed the 14-item MHC-Short Form, alongside validated measures of anxiety and depression. Five confirmatory factor analytic and bifactor models were developed based on extant research and theory. Results: Overall, a bifactor structure with a "general" positive mental health factor, and three specific factors ("hedonic well-being," "social well-being," and "psychological well-being") fitted the data well and was deemed the superior model. Conclusion: A bifactor model of the MHC-Short Form is recommended comprising a composite score alongside specific factors of hedonic, social, and psychological well-being. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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10. What makes electricity consumers change their behavior? Influence of attitude and perceived impact of DR programs on awareness
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Bâra, Adela and Oprea, Simona-Vasilica
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- 2024
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11. Chronic stress and lack of social support: Role in adolescent depression and suicide-related behaviors in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Vidal, Carol, Reinert, Maddy, Nguyen, Theresa, and Jun, Hyun-Jin
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MENTAL illness , *COVID-19 pandemic , *DEPRESSION in adolescence , *CONFIRMATORY factor analysis , *SOCIAL support - Abstract
This study aimed to examine acute and chronic stressors, and perceived lack social support, and their associations with depression and suicidal ideation in adolescents during the COVID-19 pandemic. Deidentified data from (N = 270,153) U.S. adolescents aged 11 to 17 who completed the Patient Health Questionnaire 9-item tool (PHQ-9) in the years 2020 and 2021 were sourced from a collection of online screening tools that are free, confidential, anonymous, and scientifically validated. In addition to depression, the survey included questions about suicidality, past/chronic stressful events, and contributors to mental health problems and sociodemographic variables. SPSS software version 28 for descriptive analyses, and Mplus version 7.31 for confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) and structural equation modeling (SEM), were respectively used. Participants were predominantly female, White, and heterosexual, and exhibited a high prevalence of severe depression and a significant frequency of suicidal thoughts. Significant associations were found between past/chronic stressful events, and lack of social support, with suicidality and depression. Mental health stress due to the COVID-19 pandemic itself presented no significant associations with depression and suicidality and was weakly and negatively associated with lack of social support and past/chronic stressors. These findings reinforce the notion that prior traumatic events can create vulnerabilities in the face of acute stressors, while social support can enhance resilience in adolescents. Factors that increase resilience, such as preventing traumatic events, reducing social stressors, and increasing social support, can serve as valuable guidelines for clinical and public health interventions. • Chronic stress and low social support increased depression and suicidality. • Stress due to COVID-19 was not associated with depression and suicidality. • Enhancing resilience may equip adolescents better to face acute stressors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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12. Psychometric evaluation and measurement invariance of the problematic smartphone use scale among college students: A national survey of 130 145 participants.
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Sun, Haocan and Tang, Kun
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Background and Aims Methods Results Conclusions Given the insufficient validation of previously imported smartphone addiction scales in China, this study revised and evaluated the Problematic Smartphone Use Scale among Chinese college students (PSUS‐C).We based our research on a national sample comprising 1324 higher education institutions and 130 145 participants. Using cross‐sectional data, comprehensive methods were employed to examine validity, reliability and measurement invariance.The final scale consists of 20 items across four dimensions: withdrawal and loss of control, negative impact, salience behaviors and excessive use. All Heterotrait‐Monotrait (HTMT) values were below 0.85, and the lower 90% and upper 95% confidence intervals were also below 0.85, except for factors 1 and 3. The amount of variance (AVE) values were greater than 0.5, composite reliability (ω) values exceeded 0.89 and all factor loadings were above 0.5. The criterion validity was supported as expected: problematic smartphone usage positively correlated with depression (
r = 0.451), loneliness (8 items,r = 0.455), loneliness (6 items,r = 0.504), social media use (r = 0.614) and phone usage duration (r = 0.148); and negatively correlated with life satisfaction (r = −0.218) and self‐esteem (r = −0.416). Across sex, type of university and place of residence, the measurement invariance performed well, with most changes in root mean square error of approximation (ΔRMSEA), comparative fit index (ΔCFI) and Tucker–Lewis index (ΔTLI) values being less than 0.005, and no indicator showing a difference greater than 0.010.The Problematic Smartphone Use Scale for College Students (PSUS‐C) demonstrated good factor structure, internal consistency, construct validity, discriminant validity and criterion validity. Strict and structural invariance were demonstrated across sex, type of university and place of residence. The PSUS‐C has the potential to assess smartphone addiction among Chinese university students. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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13. Psychometric Properties of the Brief COPE Among Sexual Minority Adults.
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Solberg, Marvin A. and Shukla, Meghna
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Background: The Brief COPE is a widely used coping instrument, but there is a paucity of research regarding its ability to measure coping among sexual minority (SM) persons. Objective: This study determined the psychometric properties of the Brief COPE and identified coping domains among a sample of SM individuals. Methods: An online survey was conducted with 530 SM persons in the United States. Participants completed the dispositional version of the Brief COPE. Confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) determined construct validity. Cronbach's alpha examined the reliability of resulting domains. Exploratory structural equation modeling (ESEM) was employed to identify coping domains and criterion-related validity was assessed by examining the relationship of the domains with substance use measures (alcohol, cannabis, and drug use). Results: CFA replicated the original 14-factor structure. ESEM identified 3 second-order domains with acceptable fit (chi-square [χ2] = 905.81; degrees of freedom [d f ] = 334, P <.001; comparative fit index [CFI] = 0.90; root mean square error of approximation = 0.06; 90% confidence interval = 0.05-0.06; and standardized root mean residual = 0.08). The 3 second-order domains demonstrated good reliability: adaptive (ω = 0.84), support (ω = 0.85), and disengaged coping (ω = 0.84). Disengaged coping exhibited the strongest correlations with substance use outcomes. Conclusions: Findings provide evidence to support the reliability and validity of the Brief COPE and validates its use with SM persons. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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14. Validation of the Attitudes toward Lying to People with Dementia (ALPD) Questionnaire among Social Workers in Spain.
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Yusta-Tirado, Rubén, Gallardo-Peralta, Lorena P, Gálvez-Nieto, José Luis, and Sánchez-Moreno, Esteban
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SOCIAL workers , *CRONBACH'S alpha , *RESEARCH methodology evaluation , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CHI-squared test , *PSYCHOMETRICS , *ATTITUDES of medical personnel , *STATISTICS , *DEMENTIA , *FACTOR analysis , *DATA analysis software , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *DEMENTIA patients ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
Gerontological interventions should address the various geriatric syndromes suffered by the elderly, such as neurodegenerative diseases. Therapeutic lying is an effective and humanizing strategy to deal with dementia, used by various disciplines in the social and healthcare fields. This intervention strategy is made up of all the different responses to reality that are given to a person with cognitive impairment. This study analyzes the validity of the Spanish adaptation of the Attitudes toward Lying to People with Dementia (ALPD) questionnaire, given to 253 social workers who directly and indirectly intervened with older people suffering from cognitive impairment in public and private centers in Spain during the year 2022. The results of the validity and reliability analyses support the psychometric quality of ALPD for use in Spanish social workers. The statistical results indicate a good fit of the bifactor model (person-focused and lie-focused) and show the questionnaire to be reliable, with adequate psychometric properties. The article concludes with a discussion of practical, formative, and ethical challenges for social work in the field of geriatric services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. Suicidal behaviors questionnaire-revised: Adaptation and psychometric properties of the Brazilian version.
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Aprigio, Isabelle and Gauer, Gustavo
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PSYCHOMETRICS , *SUICIDAL behavior , *CONFIRMATORY factor analysis , *SEXUAL minorities , *BRAZILIANS - Abstract
AbstractSuicidal behaviors are a significant concern in Latin American countries. However, validated scales in Brazil do not address all behaviors on the suicide spectrum. We aimed to adapt the Suicidal Behaviors Questionnaire-Revised (SBQ-R) for Brazil. The SBQ-R was independently translated, back-translated, and evaluated by experts—two thousand eight hundred ninety-eight participants (68.30% women; M = 27.42; A = 18–69) from Brazil. The SBQ-R items presented adequate reliability (ω = .86). Confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) confirmed the construct validity (χ2(df) = 52.707(2), p<.001; CFI = .997; TLI = .992; RMSEA = .052; SRMR = .024). Multigroup CFA indicated that the SBQ-R is invariant for gender, sexual orientation, race, and education level. The SBQ-R has convergent validity for depression (r = 0.61), anxiety (r = 0.49), stress (r = 0.49), impulsivity (r = 0.40), hopelessness (r = 0.60) and divergent validity, with gender and sexual minorities showing higher levels of suicidal behaviors. The Brazilian SBQ-R is designated for use by Brazilian adults. Future studies must investigate the predictive validity of the SBQ-R in clinical samples. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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16. Competing Models of the Structure of Subjective Well‐Being: Have All Won and Must All Have Prizes?
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Jovanović, Veljko
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SOIL-Water Balance Model , *STRUCTURAL equation modeling , *CONFIRMATORY factor analysis , *AFFECT (Psychology) , *LIFE satisfaction - Abstract
ABSTRACT Objective Methods Results Conclusions The tripartite model of subjective well‐being (SWB) posits three components: positive affect, negative affect, and life satisfaction. The fundamental issue regarding the structure of SWB and the meaning of the general SWB factor remains unresolved.Across three studies and six samples (total N = 9304), we evaluated competing models of SWB and tested the criterion‐related validity of SWB components operationalized within different models. In addition to a standard confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) and bifactor‐CFA, we used exploratory structural equation modeling (ESEM) and bifactor‐ESEM approaches. Latent factor models were applied to examine the nomological network of SWB in relation to several external criteria (e.g., positive expectations, depression, and anxiety).We found evidence supporting the three‐factor and bifactor‐ESEM models of SWB. The meaning and interpretability of the general and specific factors of SWB were found to depend on the indicators used to assess affective well‐being. Several issues concerning the bifactor‐CFA model were identified. Both the general and specific factors of SWB exhibited meaningful and interpretable nomological networks.The structure of SWB, the value of incorporating a general factor, and the nature of general and specific SWB factors depend on the instruments used to measure SWB. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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17. Development and validation of the parental health literacy scale for children with asthma (PHLSCA).
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Meng, Jing, Zhang, Wei, He, Xudong, Zhang, Lei, Gu, Xiqian, Xing, Yana, and Duan, Hongmei
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HEALTH literacy , *LITERATURE reviews , *ASTHMA in children , *CONFIRMATORY factor analysis , *PRINCIPAL components analysis - Abstract
Objective: This study aimed to develop and validate an instrument to assess the health literacy of parents of children with asthma in a Chinese context. Methods: The preliminary Parental Health Literacy Scale for Children with Asthma (PHLSCA) was developed based on a literature review and refined to 45 items through two rounds of expert consultation using the Delphi method. A total of 481 parents of children with asthma were recruited from seven hospitals across four provinces in China between February and April 2019. Principal component analysis (PCA) and confirmatory factor analysis were conducted to evaluate the structural and construct validity of the scale. Results: The development and validation processes led to a 38 items scale comprising three subscales, namely: Health Knowledge (11 items), Health Skills (19 items) and Health Behavior (8 items). The scale demonstrated good reliability, with an internal consistency of Cronbach's α = 0.956 and a split-half reliability of r = 0.887 (p < 0.01). The Item Content Validity Index (I-CVI) ranged from 0.81 to 1.00, and the Scale-CVI was 0.842. The correlation coefficients and factor analysis results indicated good construct validity, with the factors explaining 59.33% to 62.90% of the variance in each subscale. Conclusions: The final version of the questionnaire (PHLSCA) has been demonstrated to be a valid and reliable tool for assessing the health literacy of parents of Chinese children with asthma. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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18. ICD-11 adjustment disorder: Translation and validation of the Danish international adjustment disorder questionnaire among a working population of social educators.
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Vang, M.L., Andersen, L.P.S., Biering, K., Hyland, P., Shevlin, M., Linnet, J., and Pihl-Thingvad, J.
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ADJUSTMENT disorders , *CONFIRMATORY factor analysis , *PSYCHOMETRICS , *POST-traumatic stress , *JOB stress - Abstract
Adjustment disorder is frequently used as a diagnostic category for work-related stress disorders in Denmark. However, the diagnostic category is poorly delineated in ICD-10 which has hampered clinical practice as well as research studying the development of work-related adjustment disorders. In ICD-11, the diagnostic category of adjustment disorder has been refined and a new self-report measure is available to operationalize symptoms. The aim of the current study is to translate the International Adjustment Disorder Questionnaire (IADQ) to Danish and test the psychometric properties of the scale in a sample of social educators. A total of 609 social educators in current employment participated in an online survey including the IADQ and data was analyzed using confirmatory factor analysis. Findings suggested that a two-factor model reflecting the distinction between preoccupation and failure to adapt as part of the diagnostic criterion fitted the data best, although strong factor correlations and one cross-factor loading suggests that differentiating between the dimensions of preoccupation and failure to adapt is difficult. Relationships to burnout, posttraumatic stress and general distress support the validity of the Danish translation of the IADQ. Further research should explore the structure of adjustment disorder among other working populations. • The first study to test ICD-11 adjustment disorder among a working population. • Danish version of International Adjustment Disorder Questionnaire (IADQ) is valid. • Findings show psychometric challenges of the IADQ for working populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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19. Psychometric properties of the Arabic version of the everyday memory questionnaire - revised (EMQ-R) among the Lebanese population.
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Taleb, Aya, Ismail, Ali, and Abou-Abbas, Linda
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RECOLLECTION (Psychology) , *PSYCHOMETRICS , *PROSPECTIVE memory , *CRONBACH'S alpha , *CONFIRMATORY factor analysis - Abstract
Objective: This study aimed to evaluate the psychometric properties of the Arabic version of the Everyday Memory Questionnaire- Revised (EMQ-R-A) in a sample of Lebanese adults. Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted in August 2023. A diverse sample of 483 Lebanese adults aged 18 to 60 years from all Lebanese governorates was recruited. Participants completed an Arabic-language questionnaire comprising three sections: socio-demographic characteristics, health-related inquiries, the EMQ-R-A and the Arabic version of the Prospective and Retrospective Memory Questionnaire (PRMQ). Results: The study's findings indicated that the EMQ-R-A displayed strong internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha = 0.925). Convergent validity was supported by a significant correlation with PRMQ. Test-retest results demonstrated strong reliability with a Cronbach's alpha of 0.925. Confirmatory factor analysis revealed a three-factor model including retrieval related factors, attentional tracking related factors, and other factors. The factors labeled "Retrieval" and "Attentional Tracking" elucidate aspects of memory retrieval system efficacy and attention-related challenges. Higher EMQ-R-A scores were found to be associated with the female gender, lower attention, physical inactivity, lower educational levels, and higher number of comorbid disorders. Conclusion: The EMQ-R-A exhibits good validity and reliability. The identified factors associated with memory decline underscore the importance of addressing lifestyle factors, such as promoting physical activity, better educational attainment, and addressing comorbid health conditions, to potentially mitigate memory challenges. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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20. Dutch adaptation of the Prosocial Behavior Questionnaire (PBQ-NL): a validity and reliability study in adolescents and young adults.
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Te Brinke, Lysanne W., Er-Vargün, Gamze, and Gummerum, Michaela
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PROSOCIAL behavior , *PSYCHOMETRICS , *CONFIRMATORY factor analysis , *DUTCH people , *STATISTICAL reliability - Abstract
This study assessed the psychometric properties of the Dutch translation of the Prosocial Behavior Questionnaire (PBQ-NL), a self-report questionnaire that distinguishes altruistic, reactive, and proactive prosocial behaviours. Participants were 381 Dutch adolescents and young adults aged 13–30 (Mage = 18.62, SD = 2.59, 65.1% female). Test-retest reliability data were available for 199 participants. A Confirmatory Factor Analyses supported the three-factor structure of the questionnaire, with adequate six-month test-retest reliability. Altruistic and reactive prosocial behaviours correlated significantly and positively with prosocial behaviours directed at family/peers and the larger society, but not with depression or aggression. Conversely, proactively motivated prosocial behaviour correlated significantly and negatively with prosocial behaviour directed at family and positively with experienced opportunities for contribution to the larger society, aggression, and depression. These findings show that the PBQ-NL is a reliable measure to disentangle self- and other-serving motivations that underly prosociality during adolescence and young adulthood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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21. Construct Validity and Measurement Invariance of the Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale - Short Form (DERS-SF): Further Evidence From Community and Student Samples.
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Asgarizadeh, Ahmad, Mazidi, Mahdi, Preece, David A., and Dehghani, Mohsen
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PSYCHOMETRICS , *CONFIRMATORY factor analysis , *EMOTION regulation , *LEGAL evidence , *TEST validity - Abstract
The current study aimed to evaluate the psychometric properties of the Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale-Short Form (DERS-SF) in Iran, including testing its measurement invariance across sexes, as well as community and student populations. Two samples were recruited: a community sample of 583 participants (58.7% female; Mage = 33.55) and a university student sample of 409 participants (67.2% female; Mage = 24.48). Besides the DERS-SF, participants completed a battery of instruments online, measuring mentalizing capacity and borderline personality features. Confirmatory factor analyses supported the tenability of the five-factor model, excluding the awareness subscale. Except for the awareness subscale, acceptable to excellent internal consistencies were found for the DERS-SF and its subscales. The awareness-excluded DERS-SF was significantly and strongly associated with relevant constructs (|rs| =.49 to.59). This study also found evidence for configural, metric, and scalar invariance of the DERS-SF across sexes and community and student populations. Our findings extended the evidence for the validity and reliability of the DERS-SF and its awareness-excluded version by administering it in Iranian samples and supporting its cross-cultural applicability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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22. Evaluating the Psychometric Properties of the German Self and Interpersonal Functioning Scale (SIFS).
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Macina, Caroline, Kerber, André, Zimmermann, Johannes, Ohse, Ludwig, Kampe, Leonie, Mohr, Jil, Walter, Marc, Hörz-Sagstetter, Susanne, and Wrege, Johannes Sebastian
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PERSONALITY questionnaires , *PSYCHOMETRICS , *CONFIRMATORY factor analysis , *TEST validity , *STATISTICAL reliability - Abstract
The Self and Interpersonal Functioning Scale (SIFS) is a 24-item self-report questionnaire assessing personality functioning according to the alternative DSM-5 model for personality disorders. We evaluated the German SIFS version in a total sample of 886 participants from Germany and Switzerland. Its factor structure was investigated with confirmatory factor analysis comparing bifactor models with two specific factors (self- and interpersonal functioning) and four specific factors (identity, self-direction, empathy, and intimacy). The SIFS sum and domain scores were tested for reliability and convergent validity with self-report questionnaires and interviews for personality functioning, -organization, -traits, -disorder categories, and well-being. None of the bifactor models yielded good model fit, even after excluding two items with low factor loadings and including a method factor for reverse-keyed items. Based on a shortened 22-item SIFS version, models suggested that the g-factor explained 52.9–59.6% of the common variance and that the SIFS sum score measured the g-factor with a reliability of.68–.81. Even though the SIFS sum score showed large test-retest reliability and correlated strongly with well-established self-report questionnaires and interviews, the lack of structural validity appears to be a serious disadvantage of the SIFS compared to existing self-reports questionnaires of personality functioning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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23. How did New Zealanders decide to get vaccinated against COVID-19? Developing a novel comprehensive model of vaccination intention.
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Rahmani, Diyako, Fletcher, Phoebe, Hess, Alexandra Claudia, and Croucher, Stephen
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HEALTH attitudes , *HEALTH Belief Model , *POLITICAL trust (in government) , *CONFIRMATORY factor analysis , *STRUCTURAL equation modeling , *PLANNED behavior theory - Abstract
This research introduces and validates the Comprehensive Model of Vaccination Intention (CMVI) to offer a holistic understanding of COVID-19 vaccination uptake in New Zealand. The CMVI excels by presenting a highly explanatory model, incorporating trust in the government's vaccination policy along with and a spectrum of social, cognitive, contextual, and affective variables from theories of Interpersonal Behavior, Planned Behavior, and Health Belief Model. A nationally representative sample of 993 participants was analyzed using confirmatory factor analysis and structural equation modeling. The findings underscore the positive impact of subjective norms and societal perceptions of vaccination, attitude toward vaccination, trust in government, and vaccination habits on COVID-19 vaccination intention. This study highlights the importance of normalizing vaccination to boost intention and shows how emotions shape attitudes. It also finds that better vaccine accessibility and trust in the government lower perceived costs and raise perceived benefits, improving overall attitude and strengthening vaccination intention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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24. Mode choice modelling of work trips using latent variables for a medium-sized city in India.
- Author
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Shaheem, S., Sreelekshmi, S, Radhakrishnan, Nisha, Anjaneyulu, M. V. L. R., and Mathew, Samson
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EXPLORATORY factor analysis , *CONFIRMATORY factor analysis , *LATENT variables , *TRAVEL time (Traffic engineering) , *PUBLIC transit , *TRAFFIC congestion - Abstract
Decline in the use of public transit by commuters have increased the use of private vehicles, causing higher levels of traffic congestion, accidents, etc. The present study aims to identify major latent attributes influencing the behaviour of government employees working in the study area by using an integrated mode choice model. The unobservable attributes that influence mode selection decisions were analysed using the semantic differential technique and a five-point bipolar adjective scale. Conventional mode choice models and latent variable integrated mode choice models were developed for four different modes. Sensitivity analysis was carried out to assess the impact of significant variables which has revealed that 15% decrease in travel time on public transport could lead to a 17% increase in ridership. This study also identified significant variables that influence mode selection decisions and formulated policies to increase the use of public transport in medium-sized cities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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25. "I must make the grade!": the role of cognitive appraisals, irrational beliefs, exam anxiety, and affect, in the academic self-concept of undergraduate students.
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Turner, M. J., Evans, A. L., Fortune, G., and Chadha, N. J.
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CONFIRMATORY factor analysis , *EQUILIBRIUM testing , *BEHAVIOR therapy , *FACTOR structure , *UNDERGRADUATES , *TEST anxiety - Abstract
Background and objectives: Examination anxiety is a common occurrence, and is potentially detrimental to student attainment. In recent theorizing, it has been suggested that cognitive appraisals, as put forth in cognitive appraisal theory, and irrational beliefs, as put forth in rational emotive behavior therapy, may interact to predict affectivity. The current research examines the antecedents and associates of examination affect and academic self-concept in undergraduate students. Design: A preliminary study applied confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) to test the factor structure of an irrational beliefs inventory. Study 1 utilized a cross-sectional and correlational approach to testing core theoretical assumptions. Study 2 took a two-wave longitudinal and path analytical approach to examine temporal effects between target variables. Method: All self-report data collection took place in the United Kingdom with university students. We recruited n = 1150, n = 362, n = 662 for preliminary, study 1, and study 2, respectively. Results: Across studies, data indicated that a pattern of adaptive cognitive appraisal was associated with more advantageous affectivity, and better academic self-concept. Conclusions: Reciprocal temporal relationships were revealed between many variables, supporting an interactive and bidirectional view of how cognition and affect are related pertaining to examination anxiety. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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26. Development and validation of the 5-Dimension Comprehensive Assessment Scale (5DCAS) for assessing physical function and health in axial spondyloarthritis.
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Zheng, Yan, Zheng, Zhaohui, Pei, Jin, Yang, Xichao, Li, Xiaoyan, Li, Qin, Zhang, Yan, Li, Hongbin, Li, Xueyi, Wang, Mian, Li, Jun, Xu, Bei, Jiang, He, Zuo, Dachen, Lv, Tingting, Li, Zhengfang, Bai, Lijie, Liu, Shanshan, Shang, Lei, and Wu, Lijun
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- *
QUALITY of life , *PHYSICAL mobility , *SYMPTOM burden , *CONFIRMATORY factor analysis , *SOCIAL participation - Abstract
Objective: To describe the development and validation of a novel patient reported scale, which is a comprehensive assessment of the physical function and health specific for patients with axial spondyloarthritis (axSpA). Methods: This is a multiphase, mixed methods study. Based on opinion collection and discussions of multidisciplinary consensus meetings and patients, an initial item pool covering all of the ranges of functioning was generated. The item optimization, model fit, response category functioning, differential item functioning, reliability, structure validity, and unidimensionality were tested by confirmatory factor analysis and Rasch measurement theory framework. Results: After the consensus meeting and the two rounds of surveys in patients with axSpA, the initial pool of 135 items was reduced to 25 items formed in five dimensions, which exhibited preferable item reliability, item fit, and person fit to the Rasch model. The Five-Dimensional Comprehensive Assessment Scale (5DCAS) had the best reliability and validity (Kaiser–Meyer–Olkin was 0.919, and the standardized Cronbach's α coefficient was 0.932). The final version of 5DCAS had good unidimensionality, and the Person Separation Index ranged from 0.77 to 0.85. 5DCAS significantly correlated with ASAS-HI, SF-36, BASFI, and disease activity with p values of < 0.001. Conclusion: 5DCAS is a novel patient-reported outcome specific to axSpA, and it forms five dimensions providing a linear sum score of 25 items. 5DCAS comprehensively and significantly represents the physical function and health status of patients with axSpA, although its performance needs further validation in future clinical practices. Key Points • The primary goal in the management of axial spondyloarthritis is to maximize health-related quality of life. Except for the current instruments of ASAS-HI, BASFI, or SF-36, the heterogeneous clinical symptoms and rapid updated treat-to-target concept require a new instrument which can comprehensive and significant evaluate the changes of physical function and health-related quality of life due to disease. • 5DCAS is a novel patient-reported outcome specific to axSpA, and it forms five dimensions providing a linear sum score of 25 items, which contained aspect of pain involvement, spine mobility, global body performance and activity, social participation and environment, and mental health. All of the items were set to a 4-point semantic rating scale measuring severity, frequency, or interference from score 0 to 3. Total 5DCAS score ranges from 0 to 75; higher scores represented greater symptom burden and worse physical function. • 5DCAS is a comprehensive, multidisciplinary, and convenient disease outcome measurement specific for axSpA. It provides a new evaluation instrument in clinical trial and treat-to-target clinical remission for patients and physicians, and also provides a sensitive and accurate assessment standard for optimized health benefits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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27. Pre-service EFL teachers' motivational beliefs about instructional use of technology: development and validation of a scale.
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Gan, Zhengdong, Fulton, Christopher, and Li, Siying
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ENGLISH as a foreign language , *ENGLISH teachers , *TEACHER development , *EDUCATIONAL technology , *CONFIRMATORY factor analysis - Abstract
This article presents the development and validation of the Pre-Service EFL Teachers' Motivational Beliefs about Instructional Use of Technology scale (PTMB-EFL) using a randomly split sample. Confirmatory factor analysis supported a 23-item six-factor structure of the PTMB-EFL generated from exploratory factor analysis. Significant correlations between the PTMB-EFL factors and teachers' perceived actual classroom technology use practices supported the concurrent validity of the PTMB-EFL. A second-order confirmatory factor analysis further provided empirical evidence to consider motivational beliefs about instructional use of technology as a unitary construct with six correlated but distinct motivational belief factors. In addition, unlike previous technology acceptance studies, this study revealed that among the six types of motivational beliefs, growth mindset was the strongest predictor of perceived actual classroom technology use practices. The PTMB-EFL can be used as an evaluation tool to appraise pre-service EFL or ESL teacher technology-based English teaching experience during their practicum, and as a research tool to investigate more associations between instructional use of technology and other contextual and teacher factors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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28. Psychometric properties evaluation of the Persian version of the self-report outcome scale for lupus disease Lupus_PRO version 1.7.
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Mahmoudzadeh, Bahareh, Mohammadian, Youkhabeh, Assar, Shirin, and Ahmadi, Seyyed Mojtaba
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CONFIRMATORY factor analysis , *PATIENT reported outcome measures , *SYSTEMIC lupus erythematosus , *CRONBACH'S alpha , *PSYCHOMETRICS - Abstract
Purpose: Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE) significantly affects both the quality of life related to health and non-health aspects. This study aims to evaluate the psychometric properties of the Persian version of the Lupus_PRO questionnaire, version 1.7. The questionnaire serves as a specific self-report outcome scale for assessing the treatment outcomes of Lupus disease. Methods: The Lupus_PRO questionnaire, version 1.7, was translated into Persian using the standard forward-backward method. After being completed by 218 patients with Lupus, the psychometric properties of the instrument were examined. The Convergent and Discriminant Validity of the scale were assessed using Average Variance Extracted and Cross Loadings, respectively. The construct validity of the questionnaire was also evaluated through Confirmatory Factor Analysis (CFA). Cronbach's alpha was calculated to assess the reliability of the questionnaire dimensions. Findings: Out of the 218 patients with lupus who participated in the current study, 13 (6%) were male, and 205 (94%) were female. The mean (SD) age of participants was 40.29 (10.94) years. The Average Variance Extracted (AVE) for HRQOL and Non-HRQOL constructs, except for the Coping and Cognition dimension, was greater than 0.50, indicating satisfactory convergent validity. The interdimensional correlation coefficient (Discriminant Validity) for each dimension with other questionnaire dimensions was less than 0.10, indicating that the questionnaire has good convergent and discriminant validity. Additionally, the results of the Confirmatory Factor Analysis (CFA) indicated that the questionnaire was a suitable fit. In terms of reliability, Cronbach's alpha for the various questionnaire dimensions ranged from 0.51 to 0.91, indicating good internal consistency. Conclusion: The Persian version of the Lupus_PRO questionnaire, version 1.7, demonstrates acceptable validity and reliability in the Iranian population. This instrument can effectively measure various aspects of the quality of life in patients with lupus. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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29. Exploring determining factors of MaaS app use and its potential effects on mobility behavior: Keys to gender-sensitive planning and management.
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González-Sánchez, Guadalupe, Maeso-González, Elvira, López, Elena, and Aguiar, Iago
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STRUCTURAL equation modeling , *TRANSPORTATION planning , *EXPLORATORY factor analysis , *PUBLIC opinion , *CONFIRMATORY factor analysis - Abstract
Mobility as a Service (MaaS) has become an emerging trend in transportation planning and management due to its potential to overcome the challenges of urban mobility toward the achievement of sustainable mobility goals. This requires people to be willing to use MaaS apps. However, given their relative novelty, there is still a lack of research on the factors that influence the use of these apps, as well as the possible role of gender in such use. In this context, this study aims to explore the complex relationships between a set of relevant factors and their influence on the intention to adopt MaaS apps, with special attention to the role of gender as a moderating variable. For this purpose, a survey was conducted in the Madrid Metropolitan Area (Spain), comprising 8358 respondents (3627 men and 4731 women), and a four-step methodological procedure was adopted: (i) Exploratory Factor Analysis (EFA), (ii) Confirmatory Factor Analysis (CFA), (iii) Structural Equation Model (SEM) on the total sample (iv) Gender-sensitive analysis, including a Multi-group analysis – SEM. The results demonstrate that technophilia, perceived usefulness and perceived ease of use are determining factors. Green values and attitudes toward shared modes have a notable total positive effect. However, contrary to expected, attitudes toward public transport, car and bicycle hardly explain the intention to adopt MaaS apps. Our analysis also reveals significant gender differences in the causal relationships hypothesized in the model. These findings allow us to outline the policy initiatives that could favor the use of MaaS apps, with a gender-sensitive approach. • Development and validation of a structural model on the intention to use MaaS apps. • Technophilia, perceived usefulness and perceived ease of use are crucial factors. • Green values and attitudes toward shared modes have a notable total positive effect. • Attitudes toward public transport, car and bicycle hardly explain MaaS apps usage. • Gender plays a moderating role in the structural model proposed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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30. Factorial invariance of the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children, Fifth Edition, across the UK, US and Australia & New Zealand.
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Wilson, Christopher J., Bowden, Stephen C., Batty, Abigail M., Byrne, Linda K., and Weiss, Lawrence G.
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COGNITIVE testing , *RESEARCH methodology evaluation , *INTELLIGENCE tests , *FACTOR analysis , *CHILDREN - Abstract
Objectives: This study examined the factorial invariance of the factor structure of the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children, Fifth Edition (WISC‐V) across the UK, US and Australia & New Zealand (A&NZ). The factorial equivalence of cognitive assessments should be demonstrated before assuming cross‐culture generalizability and interpretations of score comparisons. Methods: Data were obtained from the UK, US and A&NZ normative standardizations of the WISC‐V. The samples consisted of 415 UK, 2200 US and 528 A&NZ children, aged 6–16. Confirmatory factor analysis was applied separately in each sample to establish the baseline model. Next, tests of factorial invariance were undertaken using the recommended hierarchical approach, firstly across the UK and A&NZ samples and then across the UK and US samples. Results: The five‐factor first‐order scoring model was found to be excellent fit across all three samples independently. Strict factorial invariance of the WISC‐V was demonstrated firstly across the UK and A&NZ and secondly the UK and US nationally representative standardization samples. Comparison of latent means found small but significant differences in female children across the UK and A&NZ samples. Conclusions: Consistent with previous research, these results demonstrate the generality of the WISC‐V factor structure across the UK, US and A&NZ. Furthermore, as the WISC‐V factor structure aligns with the Cattell–Horn–Carroll (CHC) model of cognitive abilities, the results add further support to the cross‐cultural generalizability of the CHC model. Small but significant differences in latent factor scores found across samples support the development and use of local normative data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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31. Is the development of diversification in executive functioning universal? Longitudinal evidence from Ghana.
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Modrek, Anahid S. and Wolf, Sharon
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EXECUTIVE function , *COGNITIVE flexibility , *CONFIRMATORY factor analysis , *CHILD development , *FACTOR analysis - Abstract
The component structure of executive functioning (EF) has been shown to change across development. Empirical research examining this in Sub‐Saharan Africa is limited. We report the development of EF component structure with a large sample of Ghanaian children (n = 2,979) followed longitudinally from ages 3 through 12 across six waves. Existing literature suggests unitary models of EF (components loading onto a single factor) early in childhood, with development across childhood and into adolescence resulting in a more diversified EF model (components loading onto two‐ or three‐factors). To test these developmental differences, participants completed EF batteries that measured EF components: working memory, short‐term memory, inhibition, and cognitive flexibility/shifting. We employed confirmatory factor analysis to test factor models in 3‐ to 4‐year‐olds, 5‐ to 6‐year‐olds, 7‐ to 9‐year‐olds, and 10‐ to 12‐year‐olds. Contrary to existing literature, a two‐factor EF model best explained EF performance as early as 3–4 years of age. Findings suggest that diversification of EF components may emerge earlier in childhood than expected in some contexts, questioning the universality in the timing of unification and diversification of EF structure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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32. Dimensional model of socioemotional learning built on a large‐scale sample of Chilean students.
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Berger, Christian and Angulo Gallo, Lisandra
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SOCIAL emotional learning , *EXPLORATORY factor analysis , *CONFIRMATORY factor analysis , *SECONDARY school students , *CONCEPTUAL models - Abstract
Even though Social and Emotional Learning (SEL) has become a central domain in education, there is still a lack of clarity in the underlying conceptual models guiding educational efforts and insufficient empirical evidence supporting these models. The Chilean Agency for Quality in Education developed a socioemotional questionnaire as part of the Comprehensive Learning Diagnosis (DIA), administered in educational institutions nationwide. Its underlying conceptual model considers nine SEL competencies structured into three dimensions: Individual, Communal, and Civic, mapping onto the Chilean educational curriculum and learning goals relative to SEL. Even though this model was built based on a thorough revision of existing approaches to SEL and assessment tools, this dimensional structure has not been empirically tested. This study explores a dimensional model of SEL based on a large‐scale sample of Chilean students assessed through the DIA (882,553 7th–12th graders). Exploratory factor analysis (EFA) and confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) were conducted to determine the dimensional structure, also testing for invariance by educational level (basic vs. secondary education) and gender. EFA evidenced a three‐dimensional structure, with factors labeled as individual, relational, and socio‐moral based on their composition. CFA confirmed these dimensions with adequate fit indices. Factorial invariance of the identified model was found between basic and secondary school students, and between boys and girls. The study allowed for the construction of a theoretical model of SEL based on a large‐scale sample. The identification of a moral factor as a key dimension of SEL constitutes a novel and promising perspective, in line with recent research providing new insights into SEL. Further evidence regarding the reliability and validity of the instrument should be analyzed. Also, the proposed SEL model should be tested in different countries and populations to broaden our understanding of SEL and inform educational policies and practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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33. Effective sanction avoidance in drug trafficking: The construction and validation of the restrictive deterrence utility scale using a sample of female drug offenders.
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Guan, Xin and Lo, T. Wing
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CONFIRMATORY factor analysis , *EXPLORATORY factor analysis , *WOMEN criminals , *LEGAL sanctions , *TEST validity - Abstract
Drug traffickers perform many crime strategies to avoid legal sanctions. The use of any crime strategy is mainly for reducing the risk of arrest, which has been the focus of research on restrictive deterrence. This study aims to develop a Restrictive Deterrence Utility Scale (RDUS) to measure the effectiveness of crime strategies used in drug trafficking. Survey data were collected from August to October 2021, including 294 female drug offenders aged between 21 and 61 years serving sentences with a median length of around 10 years in a Southern city in Mainland China. Exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis was conducted for scale investigation. Three valid and reliable factors for the RDUS were found: anomaly avoidance, reduction of exposure time, and the use of weapons and tools. Composite reliability, convergent validity, discriminant validity of three factors were confirmed with Cronbach α being higher than 0.9, that being higher than correspondent Average Variance Extracted which all being higher than 0.5 and higher than correspondent factor correlation. The RDUS offers a helpful method for assessing the motivation for drug traffickers to persist in drug crime and for formulating appropriate interventions for drug prohibition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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34. Scale Validation and Attributional Analysis of Public Stigma in Early-Pandemic COVID-19.
- Author
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Qin, Sang, Kundert, Carla, Vittorio Palermo, Carlo, Rolle, Reshma, Raut, Esha, and Sheehan, Lindsay
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FACTOR analysis , *CONFIRMATORY factor analysis , *PEARSON correlation (Statistics) , *STRUCTURAL equation modeling , *FACTOR structure - Abstract
Purpose: To test the validity of a COVID-19 public stigma scale and an attributional model of stigma during the early stages of the pandemic. Design: We administered a cross-sectional survey that included scales related to COVID-19 stigma to U.S. adults. Setting: We used Amazon MTurk online survey panel to recruit participants in June 2020. Subjects: U.S. adults (N = 170) participated in the study. Participants were average age of 37 and majority were men (61.2%) and White (77.6%). Measures: The Stigma Towards Disease Scale (SDS) was adapted to measure public stigma directed towards COVID-19 (SDS-C19). Additional stigma-related measures were adapted for this study. Analysis: Factorial structure of SDS-C19 was assessed using confirmatory factor analysis (CFA). Validity of SDS was examined using Pearson correlations with other stigma measures. We evaluated the attributional model of stigma using structural equation modeling. Results: Internal consistency of SDS-C19 was high and a three-factor model reflecting cognitive, affective, and behavioral factors was supported (χ2 [71, N = 170] =140.954, P =.00, CFI=.946, TLI =.931, RMSEA =.076, SRMR =.087). The SDS-C19 had strong correlations with other stigma-related measures. A blame-mediated attribution model was supported (χ2 [8, N = 170] = 21.793, P =.00, CFI =.976, TLI =.956, RMSEA =.101, SRMR =.058). Conclusion: The SDS-C19 is a valid tool for assessing COVID-19 stigma. SDS-C19 and the attribution model can guide public health communication. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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35. School adjustment scale for high school students: Development and initial validation.
- Author
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Kaynak, Semih and Kan, Adnan
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL adjustment , *EDUCATIONAL psychology , *STUDENT engagement , *HIGH school students , *CONFIRMATORY factor analysis , *STUDENT adjustment - Abstract
Although research has consistently highlighted the importance of school adjustment for high school students, validated tools for assessing this construct are currently lacking. To address this gap, our study aimed to develop and validate a scale to measure school adjustment among high school students. Employing a two‐stage approach, we first examined the concept of adjustment and generated scale items. Subsequently, we surveyed 1121 high school students, and randomly split the data into two groups for subsequent analyses. Through exploratory in the first stage and confirmatory factor analyses in the second stage, we identified two higher‐order factors within the scale: social adjustment and academic adjustment, with academic adjustment consisting of two sub‐factors, academic performance and, academic engagement. The results indicated that the scale has an excellent model fit, as well as adequate reliability and high construct validity. Overall, our study provides a valuable tool for assessing school adjustment in high school students. Practitioner Points: Given that high school students' adjustment to school encompasses both academic and social dimensions, it is essential to consider both aspects when evaluating students' overall school adjustment.The school adjustment scale demonstrates satisfactory levels of validity and reliability in assessing high school students' school adjustment levels.Educators and school counselors can utilize this scale to differentiate between students who have successfully adjusted to school and those who have not. Additionally, the scale can be instrumental in evaluating the effectiveness of school adaptation programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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36. When and how to use set‐exploratory structural equation modelling to test structural models: A tutorial using the R package lavaan.
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Marsh, Herb and Alamer, Abdullah
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STRUCTURAL equation modeling , *CONFIRMATORY factor analysis , *STRUCTURAL models , *GOODNESS-of-fit tests , *ERROR rates - Abstract
Exploratory structural equation modelling (ESEM) is an alternative to the well‐known method of confirmatory factor analysis (CFA). ESEM is mainly used to assess the quality of measurement models of common factors but can be efficiently extended to test structural models. However, ESEM may not be the best option in some model specifications, especially when structural models are involved, because the full flexibility of ESEM could result in technical difficulties in model estimation. Thus, set‐ESEM was developed to accommodate the balance between full‐ESEM and CFA. In the present paper, we show examples where set‐ESEM should be used rather than full‐ESEM. Rather than relying on a simulation study, we provide two applied examples using real data that are included in the OSF repository. Additionally, we provide the code needed to run set‐ESEM in the free R package lavaan to make the paper practical. Set‐ESEM structural models outperform their CFA‐based counterparts in terms of goodness of fit and realistic factor correlation, and hence path coefficients in the two empirical examples. In several instances, effects that were non‐significant (i.e., attenuated) in the CFA‐based structural model become larger and significant in the set‐ESEM structural model, suggesting that set‐ESEM models may generate more accurate model parameters and, hence, lower Type II error rate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
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37. Urban Middle Schoolers' Opportunities to Belong Predict Fluctuations in Their Engagement Across the School Day.
- Author
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Gray, DeLeon L., Harris-Thomas, Brooke, Ali, Joanna N., Cummings, Taylor N., McElveen, Tamika L., and Jones, Tamecia R.
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HISPANIC American students , *STUDENT engagement , *SCHOOL day , *CONFIRMATORY factor analysis , *MIDDLE school education - Abstract
Existing measures of belonging in schools do not explicitly elevate the contextual and cultural insights of the educators and students they were designed to assess. Our study addresses this shortcoming through the co-creation of an Opportunities to Belong survey measure for urban middle schoolers. The tool was developed in partnership with practicing educators and normed around Black and Latinx students (N = 225). Results of a multilevel confirmatory factor analysis revealed strong evidence for single factor structure. A within-persons multilevel model revealed that shifts in opportunities to belong predicted fluctuations in student engagement across different academic courses. Implications are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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38. The Community Social Responsibility of Rural Small Tourism Enterprises: Scale Development and Validation.
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Wu, Mao-Ying, Wang, Yi, Li, Qiucheng, Wu, Xinfang, and Ma, Shihan
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LITERATURE reviews , *EXPLORATORY factor analysis , *CONFIRMATORY factor analysis , *RURAL tourism , *SMALL business - Abstract
Rural small tourism enterprises (STEs) are involved in many discretionary, spontaneous, and supporting activities toward the host communities, which is labeled as community social responsibility (CoSR) in this study. This study develops and validates a scale to measure rural STEs' CoSR. Stage 1 found four dimensions and 33 initial items through a thorough literature review and focus group discussions. In stage 2, an exploratory factor analysis was conducted to evaluate the dimensionality of the CoSR scale. Stage 3 used confirmatory factor analysis and supported a 22-item five-dimension scale (promoting economic development, cultural preservation, cultural production, environmental protection, and political participation). An additional study was conducted to further assess nomological validity of the developed scale. The development of the CoSR scale provides a measurement instrument to spur additional empirical studies on CoSR. This scale also provides a useful tool for rural STE owners to measure and manage CoSR activities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
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39. Assessment of cross-cultural measurement invariance of the NIH toolbox fluid cognition measures between Jamaicans and African-Americans.
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Tennant, Ingrid A., Hull, Darrell M., Fagan, Marcus A., Casaletto, Kaitlin B., Heaton, Robert K., James Bateman, Caryl, Erickson, Kirk I., Forrester, Terrence, and Boyne, Michael
- Subjects
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COGNITIVE processing speed , *COGNITIVE Abilities Test , *CONFIRMATORY factor analysis , *JAMAICANS , *COGNITIVE ability - Abstract
The NIH Toolbox Cognitive Battery (NIHTB-CB) was developed as a common-metric, computerized cognitive screener for research. Although extensively normed and validated in Americans of different ethnicities, there is little data on how generalizable such results would be when used outside of the United States. The objective of this study was to assess measurement invariance (MI) of the NIHTB-CB across Jamaican and African-American samples and determine appropriateness of comparisons across groups. Multi-group confirmatory factor analyses using a single-factor model were conducted using five tests of fluid cognitive abilities from the NIHTB-CB, which assess working memory, episodic memory, processing speed, and executive function. MI was tested sequentially for configural, metric and scalar invariance. 125 Jamaican and 154 American adults of African descent were included. The Jamaican mean age was 31.6 ± 8.6 years (57% males) compared to 43.5 ± 15.5 years (25% males) for the African-American group. The Jamaicans had on average 11.3 ± 2.7 years of education compared to 13.9 ± 2.6 years for the African-Americans. We found metric and configural invariance across both samples but not scalar invariance. These findings suggest that the single factor emerging from the NIHTB-CB measures the same construct, i.e. fluid cognitive ability, in both groups and hence the battery is appropriate for assessments within cultures. However, lack of scalar invariance indicates that direct cross-cultural comparisons of performance levels should be interpreted with caution, also suggesting that U.S. normative standards are not generalizable to the Jamaican population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
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40. Testing the relationships among involvement, sponsorship perceived fit and intention to purchase sponsors' products: the case of esports tournament viewers.
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Polyakova, Olga, Karagiorgos, Thomas, Anagnostopoulos, Christos, and Alexandris, Kostas
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CONFIRMATORY factor analysis , *ESPORTS , *GOODNESS-of-fit tests , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *SELF-expression - Abstract
Purpose: Despite fast developments in esports sponsorship, limited research exists in the area of sponsorship evaluation in the esports context. The purpose of the present study was to test the relationships among esports involvement, sponsorship perceived fit and viewers' intention to buy the sponsor's products, and examine the degree to which perceived fit mediates the relationship between the involvement dimensions and intention. Design/methodology/approach: The study draws on the theoretical model of sponsorship effects proposed by Wakefield et al. (2020) and obtained quantitative data from sampling esports viewers (n = 285). Statistical analysis was carried out in three steps. Beyond the descriptive statistics, confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) was conducted to assess the goodness of fit of the measurement model. The mediation analysis was performed at the end of the study. Findings: The results supported the impact of one of the esports involvement dimensions (i.e. self-expression) on both perceived fit and esports viewers' intentions to buy sponsors' products. Involvement (self-expression) was found to have both direct and indirect relationships, through perceived fit, on purchase intentions. The study provided support for the associations among esports involvement dimensions, sponsorship perceived fit and purchase intentions. Practical implications: The practitioners should first consider the involvement profile of esports viewers. The more involved viewers will be more likely to have positive perceptions about the fit between the esports tournament and the sponsor. Originality/value: It is the first study to test a sponsorship evaluation model in the context of esports users. It does so by including a more detailed measurement of involvement (with three-dimensions) in the hypothesized model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Effect of baseball stadium food service quality on outcome variables with emphasis on the moderating role of stadium atmosphere.
- Author
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Jeong, Yunduk
- Subjects
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CUSTOMER satisfaction , *CONSUMER behavior , *FOOD quality , *BASEBALL fields , *CONFIRMATORY factor analysis , *SPORTS marketing - Abstract
Purpose: While existing research has predominantly focused on the positive relationships between service quality and outcome variables, there has been limited investigation into the influence of food service quality on these variables or the moderating role of stadium atmosphere in the realm of sports marketing. This study aims to fill these gaps by examining the structural relationships between baseball stadium food quality, timeliness, satisfaction, and behavioral intention with an emphasis on the moderating effect of stadium atmosphere. Design/methodology/approach: The data were collected from spectators attending baseball games. This study established the validity of the measurement scale through confirmatory factor analysis, factor loadings, average variance extracted, and construct reliability using Cronbach's alpha. In addition, this study employed structural equation modeling with maximum likelihood estimation to examine positive relationships and mediating effects and used Jamovi statistical software to conduct moderation analysis. Findings: The findings demonstrate the significant impacts of food quality on satisfaction and behavioral intention, the positive effects of timeliness on satisfaction and behavioral intention, and the notable influence of satisfaction on behavioral intention. Additionally, this study found that satisfaction partially mediates the aforementioned relationships and that stadium atmosphere moderates these pathways. Originality/value: This study contributes to the literature by addressing the impact of food service quality on outcome variables within sports marketing, an area that has received limited attention. Specifically, it examines how food quality and timeliness influence consumer satisfaction and behavioral intention. Furthermore, the study highlights the moderating role of stadium atmosphere, demonstrating its potential to enhance the relationship between food quality and consumer outcomes. These findings expand our understanding of consumer behavior in sports settings, offering practical strategies for team officials to enhance fan experiences. By diversifying menu options, optimizing concession operations, and collaborating with local vendors, team officials can significantly improve food service quality and create a more engaging stadium atmosphere. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Psychosocial Readiness for College: A Multidimensional Model and Measure for Students Entering College in Their Twenties.
- Author
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Phillips-Berenstein, Michal, Willner, Tirza, and Gati, Itamar
- Subjects
- *
SAT (Educational test) , *COLLEGE freshmen , *CONFIRMATORY factor analysis , *EXPLORATORY factor analysis , *COLLEGE dropouts , *SCHOOL dropouts - Abstract
Dropping out of college is often linked to insufficient academic or psychosocial readiness. Therefore, assessing students' readiness, preferably before they begin their first year of college, may help identify those at risk of dropping out. The present study aimed to develop and test a multidimensional measure that assesses psychosocial factors promoting student persistence. The Psychosocial Readiness for College questionnaire (PRCq) aims to assess the readiness of students who have deferred entering college to their twenties and comprises six dimensions: Academic Self-Efficacy, Educational Commitment, Social Comfort, Campus Engagement, Self-Discipline, and Resilience. The PRCq was administered to five cohorts of first-year college students in Israel (N = 7,382). The PRCq demonstrated good psychometric properties, and exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses supported its six dimensions. The PRCq demonstrated measurement invariance across age, gender, SES, first vs. non-first-generation students, and institution type. The PRCq's construct validity was supported by the negligible associations between the scale scores and high-school GPA and pre-college scholastic aptitude test, and the pattern of associations with the Big-5 personality factors. The PRCq's predictive validity was supported by the student dropout rate after one year. Implications for students at risk of dropping out and interventions to decrease this risk are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Associations of Career Decision-Making Strategies With Career Decision-Making Self-Efficacy and Difficulties Among French-Speaking Swiss Adolescents and Young Adults.
- Author
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Levin, Nimrod, Masdonati, Jonas, Castella, Pauline, and Grassi, Elodie
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- *
CONFIRMATORY factor analysis , *LOCUS of control , *TEST validity , *DECISION making , *SELF-efficacy - Abstract
Individuals differ in the strategies, self-efficacy beliefs, and difficulties that characterize their career decision-making process. Although some strategies are deemed adaptive, the differential links of career decision-making strategies to self-efficacy and difficulties, in general and in various cultural contexts, remain unclear. To address this issue, we investigated the associations of 12 career decision-making strategies with self-efficacy and difficulties among 414 adolescents and young adults in the cultural context of the French-speaking part of Switzerland. In doing so, we also sought to develop a French version of the Career Decision-Making Profiles questionnaire (CDMP-F) for assessing career decision-making strategies. Results confirmed the fit of the hypothesized 12-factor model underlying the CDMP-F and the adaptability assumption for six of 12 strategies: information gathering, locus of control, procrastination, speed of making the final decision, dependence on others, and desire to please others. Moreover, differentiated associations were uncovered: high procrastination and external locus of control were linked to lack of motivation ; slow speed of making the final decision was linked to general indecisiveness ; and high desire to please others was linked to external conflicts. Supporting the structural and construct validity of the CDMP-F and identifying differential associations, implications for research and practice are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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44. Measurement Models of Child Maltreatment and Associations With Suicidal Ideation Endorsement by Youth in Foster Care: A Multiverse Analytic Approach.
- Author
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Lombera, Metzli Augustina, Marshall, Amy Dyanna, Such, Sara, and Jackson, Yo
- Subjects
- *
CHILD abuse & psychology , *SELF-evaluation , *RISK assessment , *STATISTICAL models , *SUICIDAL ideation , *RESEARCH funding , *VIOLENCE , *FOSTER home care , *CAREGIVERS , *RESEARCH , *MEDICAL incident reports , *ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
Youth suicidal ideation is a prevalent experience, particularly among youth exposed to maltreatment, with a variety of indicators such as youth statements of ideation. To better understand suicidal ideation, and the associations with youth mental health outcomes, a fruitful path may be through the study of the dimensions (e.g., severity, frequency) of maltreatment exposure. While there exists extensive work on methods to best operationalize casefile records of maltreatment, such work has not been undertaken for youth self-reports, which are an important indicator of youth functioning following exposure. To address the lack of clarity of how to best operationalize youth self-reports of maltreatment, a multiverse analytic approach was taken to operationalize severity and frequency in a sample of 471 8- to 17-year-old children in foster care. We examined differences across measurement models and the models' associations with caregiver reports of youth suicidal ideation statements. Results indicate that the operationalizations used to define maltreatment resulted in differing measurement models that further differed in their associations with reports of youth suicidal ideation. This study highlights the importance of how researchers operationalize their data and the role dimensions of maltreatment have in further elucidating differential outcomes for youth exposed to maltreatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Psychometric evaluation of the Chinese version of alcohol relapse risk scale (C-ARRS) in patients with alcohol use disorder.
- Author
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Lee, I-Ting, Liao, Po-Chiao, Liu, Tung-Hsia, Ogai, Yasukazu, Chang, Hu-Ming, Liu, Yu-Li, and Huang, Ming-Chyi
- Subjects
- *
ALCOHOLISM , *BECK Anxiety Inventory , *CONFIRMATORY factor analysis , *BECK Depression Inventory , *FACTOR structure - Abstract
Alcohol use disorder (AUD) is recognized as a chronic relapsing disorder. Alcohol Relapse Risk Scale (ARRS), a multidimensionally self-rating scale, was developed initially by the Japanese to assess the risk of alcohol reuse. The study aimed to validate the reliability and factor structure of the Chinese version of the ARRS (C-ARRS) for patients with AUD. A total of 218 patients diagnosed with AUD according to DSM-5 were recruited for self-administering C-ARRS. We assessed the internal consistency of C-ARRS using Cronbach's α coefficients and examined the factor structure through confirmatory factor analysis (CFA). Additionally, we investigated the concurrent validity by correlating C-ARRS with the Visual Analog Scale of Alcohol Craving (VAS), Penn Alcohol Craving Score (PACS), Beck Depression Inventory (BDI), and Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI) scores. CFA demonstrated inadequate data fit for the original 32-item C-ARRS, prompting the development of a revised 27-item version consisting of 6 subscales with satisfactory model fit estimates. The 27-item C-ARRS exhibited favorable internal consistency, with Cronbach's α ranging from 0.611 to 0.798, along with adequate factor loadings. The 27-item C-ARRS scores displayed significant correlations with the scores of VAS, PACS, BDI and BAI (p <.001). Our results indicated favorable reliability and factor structure of the 27-item C-ARRS. The significant correlation between the 27-item C-ARRS and clinical measures (such as depression, anxiety, and craving) demonstrates satisfactory concurrent validity. These observations collectively support the feasibility of using 27-item C-ARRS to assess the risk of alcohol relapse in patients with AUD. • AUD is a prevalent psychiatric disorder characterized by a high rate of relapse. • No tools are available in Chinese to assess the relapse risk in patients with AUD. • We validated the 32-item Chinese version of Alcohol Relapse Risk Scale (CARRS). • The modified 27-item C-ARRS version exhibits satisfactory reliability and validity. • C-ARRS could provide information on relapse risk and facilitate early treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. The development and validation of the Youth Sport Parental Support-Questionnaire (YSPS-Q).
- Author
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Burke, Shannon, Sharp, Lee-Ann, Woods, David, and Paradis, Kyle F.
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EXPLORATORY factor analysis ,CONFIRMATORY factor analysis ,PARENT attitudes ,YOUTH development ,FACTOR structure - Abstract
The concept of parental support in youth sport has been well studied, however, the measurement of the construct is not as advanced. Existing sport parenting literature has relied on study-designed instruments and/or psychometric instruments not developed or validated for use in the sport-specific context. The present multi-study research programme sought to develop and validate a theory-informed measure of parental support in youth sport. In study one, athletes' perceptions of parental support were explored to gain an in-depth qualitative understanding of parental support. The findings from study one were subsequently utilised to inform the generation of initial scale items (70 items) which reflected parental support in study two. Content validity was then established during study two, through an expert panel of judges (n = 5) and members of the target population (n = 7). During study three, retained items (33 items) were administered to a sample of youth athletes (n = 318) for further item reduction and to explore the factor structure of the instrument, utilising exploratory factor analysis (EFA). In study four, a 19-item measure was administered to a second independent sample of youth athletes (n = 319), to confirm the factor structure of the instrument utilising confirmatory factor analysis (CFA). Following minor ad-hoc modifications, the final four-factor, 18-item YSPS-Q (autonomy; emotional; instrumental; informational support) demonstrated excellent model fit. Moreover, the 18-item YSPS-Q demonstrated good reliability, alongside convergent, and divergent validity. The YSPS-Q will enable researchers to effectively evaluate future parent-support programmes, and assist researchers in understanding what factors moderate its effectiveness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. The behavioural regulation in exercise questionnaire (BREQ): psychometric properties and associations with physical activity outcomes in a Norwegian sample of physically active adults.
- Author
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Havnen, Audun, Anyan, Frederick, Mehus, Ingar, and Ernstsen, Linda
- Subjects
PSYCHOMETRICS ,SELF-determination theory ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,CONFIRMATORY factor analysis ,INTRINSIC motivation - Abstract
We investigate the factor structure and psychometric properties of different versions of the Behavioural Regulation in Exercise Questionnaire (BREQ), which measures exercise motivation, and explore the association with physical activity (PA) outcomes, in a Norwegian sample of physically active adults. The sample consisted of N = 1198, 68.9% men, mean age 49.1 (SD = 11.4) using a cross-sectional design. We analysed several BREQ versions with confirmatory factor analysis to retain the one with the best model fit: The 15-item BREQ, 19-item BREQ-2, 19-item BREQ with integrated regulation, 18-item BREQ-3, and 24-item BREQ-3. An 18-item BREQ-2 with five factors (external, introjected, identified, and intrinsic regulation, and amotivation) showed excellent model fit (χ
2 = 493.848; df = 125; RMSEA =.050; 90% CI [0.045-0.054]; CFI =.975; TLI =.969; SRMR =.041), with the item "I get restless if I don't exercise regularly" removed. Configural, metric, scalar, and strict measurement invariance was supported. Intrinsic motivation was associated with the PA index (PA-I), PA frequency, duration, and intensity, and estimated cardiorespiratory fitness (eCRF). Identified regulation was associated with PA-I, PA frequency and eCRF, and introjected regulation with PA-I and intensity. External regulation was negatively related to PA frequency and eCRF, while amotivation was unrelated to all outcomes. The results support the factorial validity of the 18-item BREQ-2. The poor model fit found for other BREQ versions warrants additional studies to investigate the psychometric properties in physically active adult samples. Autonomous motivation factors were most important for PA outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. The effect of job content plateau on career commitment: exploring moderated and mediated role of proactive personality and job crafting.
- Author
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Jena, Biswa Prakash, Choudhary, Archana, Pal, Manas Kumar, and Misra, Siddharth
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CONFIRMATORY factor analysis ,LABOR turnover ,REGRESSION analysis ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,PERSONALITY - Abstract
Purpose: The job content plateau (JCP) is a condition in which employees regard their jobs as routine, and it has been linked to employee turnover intentions and organisational dysfunctional consequences. As a result, the purpose of this study is to see how negative effects of JCP can be avoided. Design/methodology/approach: A conceptual framework has been created and empirically tested that takes into account intervening elements such as job crafting (JCF) and proactive personality (PP) between JCP and career commitment (CC). In this study, survey data from professionals in a variety of businesses were gathered based on position level, total years of experience and educational level. To assess the efficacy of the suggested model and test the hypothesis proposition, confirmatory factor analysis and multiple regressions were used. Findings: The study's findings demonstrated that JCF plays a mediating function between JCP and CC, allowing proactive executives to lead their CC while minimizing JCP's negative effects. Originality/value: This study will have interesting implications and recommendations for practitioners and strategy makers when it comes to assessing the impact of JCP on enhancing career commitment among Indian executives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. The Role of Brand Authenticity and Existential Authenticity in Building Brand Loyalty Toward LGBT-Friendly Hotels.
- Author
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Kang, Juhee and Ro, Heejung
- Subjects
CONFIRMATORY factor analysis ,BRAND loyalty ,HOTEL marketing ,HOTEL management ,MARKETING management - Abstract
With the concern of rainbow marketing, sexual minority travelers have become highly vigilant when evaluating hotels' LGBT-friendly marketing with their authenticity. It is important to scrutinize how sexual minority guests interpret brand authenticity toward LGBT-friendly hotels and form personal meanings during their stay. For this reason, this study proposes brand authenticity as a starting point for authenticity formation, which leads to existential authenticity and brand loyalty. Confirmatory factor analysis and PROCESS analysis were used to analyze data collected from sexual minority guests who visited LGBT-friendly hotels within the last 2 years. The findings indicate that (1) brand authenticity is an antecedent to brand loyalty and (2) the relationship between brand authenticity and brand loyalty is mediated by existential (intrapersonal and interpersonal) authenticity. Thus, in building on the multifaceted concept of existential authenticity, this study adds new theoretical insight into hotel marketing and management strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Development of a multidimensional scale to measure organizational creative capabilities.
- Author
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Parmentier, Guy, Sheet, Zeinab, Jeannot, Florence, and Rampa, Romain
- Subjects
LITERATURE reviews ,CONFIRMATORY factor analysis ,MULTIDIMENSIONAL scaling ,RESEARCH personnel ,LONGITUDINAL method ,PREDICTIVE validity ,CREATIVE ability in children - Abstract
Although the literature's case and longitudinal studies provide ample evidence of organizational routines that foster creative behaviors, it still lacks an integrative model of organizational creative capabilities (OCCs) and the quantitative evidence to validate such a model. This research is aimed at conceptualizing and developing a reliable and valid scale for OCCs. First, we define the OCC construct's domain by conducting an extensive literature review. We then generate a list of items for the five dimensions of OCCs through a qualitative study involving a group of 24 practitioners (Study 1a) and by surveying nine senior researchers (Study 1b). We refine the OCC scale using a sample of 269 responses collected in France and Canada (Study 2), and we conduct a first‐order confirmatory factor analysis (Study 3). Finally, we perform a second‐order confirmatory analysis (Study 4a) on samples of 220 responses collected mainly in the United States and Europe, generalize our results to a sample of 205 responses, and strengthen the predictive validity (Study 4b). Our results provide significant evidence that OCCs can be conceptualized around five dimensions: internal socialization routines, idea management routines, external openness routines, creative equipment routines, and internal agility routines. Furthermore, the research confirms the scale's good psychometric qualities, thus ensuring that researchers can be confident in the reliability of any future academic research design using the scale. We also validate the OCC scale's predictive validity by verifying that a five‐dimensional reflective scale with 16 indicators has a significant positive effect on the creative outcome. This OCC scale can be used by practitioners to better understand the organizational routines they have to develop in order to strengthen their organization's creativity. It also provides a way for longitudinal studies to observe how OCCs evolve over time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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