Confound It: Social Desirability and the "Reverse-Scoring" Method Effect
Many investigators have noted "reverse-coding" method factors when exploring response pattern structure with psychological inventory data. The current article probes for the existence of a confound in these investigations, whereby an item's level of saturation with socially desirable...
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Veröffentlicht in: | European journal of psychological assessment : official organ of the European Association of Psychological Assessment 2019, Vol.35 (6), p.855-867 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Many investigators have noted
"reverse-coding" method factors when exploring response pattern
structure with psychological inventory data. The current article probes for the
existence of a confound in these investigations, whereby an item's level
of saturation with socially desirable content tends to covary with the
item's substantive scale keying. We first investigate its existence,
demonstrating that 15 of 16 measures that have been previously implicated as
exhibiting a reverse-scoring method effect can also be reasonably characterized
as exhibiting a scoring key/social desirability confound. A second set of
analyses targets the extent to which the confounding variable may confuse
interpretation of factor analytic results and documents strong social
desirability associations. The results suggest that assessment developers
perhaps consider the social desirability scale value of indicators when
constructing scale aggregates (and possibly scales when investigating
inter-construct associations). Future investigations would ideally disentangle
the confound via experimental manipulation. |
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ISSN: | 1015-5759 2151-2426 |
DOI: | 10.1027/1015-5759/a000459 |