Keyword search (4,164 papers available)

"compassion" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Development of the Japanese Version of the State Self-Compassion Scale (SSCS-J) Miyagawa Y; Tóth-Király I; Knox MC; Taniguchi J; Niiya Y; 35095662
PSYCHOLOGY
2 Is Self-Compassion Universal? Support for the Measurement Invariance of the Self-Compassion Scale Across Populations. Tóth-Király I, Neff KD 32475146
CONCORDIA
3 Body image-related cognitive fusion and disordered eating: the role of self-compassion and sad mood. Scardera S, Sacco S, Di Sante J, Booij L 32086789
PSYCHOLOGY
4 The Development and Validation of the Compassion Scale. Pommier E, Neff KD, Tóth-Király I 31516024
CONCORDIA
5 Self-compassion, chronic age-related stressors, and diurnal cortisol secretion in older adulthood Heather Herriot 29948541
PSYCHOLOGY

 

Title:Is Self-Compassion Universal? Support for the Measurement Invariance of the Self-Compassion Scale Across Populations.
Authors:Tóth-Király INeff KD
Link:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32475146?dopt=Abstract
DOI:10.1177/1073191120926232
Publication:Assessment
Keywords:SCSSelf-Compassion Scalebifactor exploratory structural equation modelingbifactor-ESEMgenderlanguagemeasurement invarianceself-compassion
PMID:32475146 Category:Assessment Date Added:2020-06-02
Dept Affiliation: CONCORDIA
1 Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
2 University of Texas at Austin, TX, USA.

Description:

Is Self-Compassion Universal? Support for the Measurement Invariance of the Self-Compassion Scale Across Populations.

Assessment. 2020 Jun 01;:1073191120926232

Authors: Tóth-Király I, Neff KD

Abstract

The Self-Compassion Scale (SCS) is a widely used measure to assess the trait of self-compassion, and, so far, it has been implicitly assumed that it functions the same way across different groups. This assumption needs to be explicitly tested to ascertain that no measurement biases exist. To address this issue, the present study sought to systematically examine the generalizability of the bifactor exploratory structural equation modeling operationalization of the SCS via tests of measurement invariance across a wide range of populations, varying according to features such as student or community status, gender, age, and language. Secondary data were used for this purpose and included a total of 18 samples and 12 different languages (N = 10,997). Multigroup analyses revealed evidence for the configural, weak, strong, strict, and latent variance-covariance of the bifactor exploratory structural equation modeling operationalization of the SCS across different groups. These findings suggest that the SCS provides an assessment of self-compassion that is psychometrically equivalent across groups. However, findings comparing latent mean invariance found that levels of self-compassion differed across groups.

PMID: 32475146 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]





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