Evidence for a general factor of behavioral activation system sensitivity

•We compared the fit of four factor models of Carver and White’s BAS scale.•The best fitting model was hierarchical with 3 group factors and a general factor.•This model was largely invariant across sex, ethnicity, and race.•A general factor accounts for the majority of the variance in BAS total sco...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of research in personality 2019-04, Vol.79, p.30-39
Hauptverfasser: Kelley, Nicholas J., Kramer, Amanda M., Young, Katherine S., Echiverri-Cohen, Aileen M., Chat, Iris Ka-Yi, Bookheimer, Susan Y., Nusslock, Robin, Craske, Michelle G., Zinbarg, Richard E.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•We compared the fit of four factor models of Carver and White’s BAS scale.•The best fitting model was hierarchical with 3 group factors and a general factor.•This model was largely invariant across sex, ethnicity, and race.•A general factor accounts for the majority of the variance in BAS total scores.•Researchers are psychometrically justified in using a BAS total score. Individual differences in one’s propensity to engage the behavioral activation system (BAS) and behavioral inhibition system (BIS) have primarily been studied with Caver and White’s (1994) BIS/BAS scale. Whereas, Carver and White identified the BIS as a unidimensional scale, they identified three separable BAS group factors - drive, fun seeking, and reward responsiveness -which Carver urged against combining into a BAS total score. Despite this, a BAS total score has been used extensively although researchers have yet to test whether a BAS general factor exists and, if so, whether a BAS total score can be interpreted as primarily being a measure of the general factor. The current study observed that the best fitting BAS factor model of those we tested was a hierarchical model with three group facets and a general factor. This model was largely invariant across both sex and race/ethnicity. We show, for the first time, that a general factor accounts for the majority of the variance in BAS total scores. Due to the superior fit of the hierarchical model and variance accounted for by the general factor, we conclude that researchers are psychometrically justified in using a BAS total score.
ISSN:0092-6566
1095-7251
DOI:10.1016/j.jrp.2019.01.002