Using Constrained Factor Mixture Analysis to Validate Mixed-Worded Psychological Scales: The Case of the Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale in the Dominican Republic
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Date
2021-08Author
García-Batista, Zoilo Emilio
Guerra-Peña, Kiero
Garrido, Luis Eduardo
Cantisano-Guzmán, Luisa Marilia
Moretti, Luciana
Cano-Vindel, Antonio
Arias, Víctor B.
Medrano, Leonardo Adrián
Abstract
A common method to collect information in the behavioral and health sciences is the
self-report. However, the validity of self-reports is frequently threatened by response
biases, particularly those associated with inconsistent responses to positively and
negatively worded items of the same dimension, known as wording effects. Modeling
strategies based on confirmatory factor analysis have traditionally been used to account
for this response bias, but they have recently become under scrutiny due to their
incorrect assumption of population homogeneity, inability to recover uncontaminated
person scores or preserve structural validities, and their inherent ambiguity. Recently,
two constrained factor mixture analysis (FMA) models have been proposed by
Arias et al. (2020) and Steinmann et al. (2021) that can be used to identify and screen
inconsistent response profiles. While these methods have shown promise, tests of their
performance have been limited and they have not been directly compared. Thus the
objective of the current study was to assess and compare their performance with
data from the Dominican Republic of the Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale (N = 632).
Additionally, as this scale had not yet been studied for this population, another objective
was to show how using constrained FMAs could help in the validation of mixedworded scales. The results indicated that removing the inconsistent respondents
identified by both FMAs (≈8%) reduced the amount of wording effects in the database.
However, whereas the Steinmann et al. method only cleaned the data partially, the
Arias et al. (2020) method was able to remove the great majority of the wording effects
variance. Based on the screened data with the Arias et al. method, we evaluated the
psychometric properties of the RSES for the Dominican population, and the results
indicated that the scores had good validity and reliability properties. Given these findings,
we recommend that researchers incorporate constrained FMAs into their toolbox and
consider using them to screen out inconsistent respondents to mixed-worded scales. Extraído de: https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.636693/full
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