Literature DB >> 21480723

Deriving childhood temperament measures from emotion-eliciting behavioral episodes: scale construction and initial validation.

Jeffrey R Gagne1, Carol A Van Hulle, Nazan Aksan, Marilyn J Essex, H Hill Goldsmith.   

Abstract

The authors describe the development and initial validation of a home-based version of the Laboratory Temperament Assessment Battery (Lab-TAB), which was designed to assess childhood temperament with a comprehensive series of emotion-eliciting behavioral episodes. This article provides researchers with general guidelines for assessing specific behaviors using the Lab-TAB and for forming behavioral composites that correspond to commonly researched temperament dimensions. We used mother ratings and independent postvisit observer ratings to provide validity evidence in a community sample of 4.5-year-old children. 12 Lab-TAB behavioral episodes were employed, yielding 24 within-episode temperament components that collapsed into 9 higher level composites (Anger, Sadness, Fear, Shyness, Positive Expression, Approach, Active Engagement, Persistence, and Inhibitory Control). These dimensions of temperament are similar to those found in questionnaire-based assessments. Correlations among the 9 composites were low to moderate, suggesting relative independence. As expected, agreement between Lab-TAB measures and postvisit observer ratings was stronger than agreement between the Lab-TAB and mother questionnaire. However, for Active Engagement and Shyness, mother ratings did predict child behavior in the Lab-TAB quite well. Findings demonstrate the feasibility of emotion-eliciting temperament assessment methodologies, suggest appropriate methods for data aggregation into trait-level constructs and set some expectations for associations between Lab-TAB dimensions and the degree of cross-method convergence between the Lab-TAB and other commonly used temperament assessments. 2011 APA, all rights reserved

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21480723      PMCID: PMC3115493          DOI: 10.1037/a0021746

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychol Assess        ISSN: 1040-3590


  25 in total

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Authors:  M K Rothbart
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Authors:  A P Matheny
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  74 in total

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7.  Temperament as an Early Risk Marker for Autism Spectrum Disorders? A Longitudinal Study of High-Risk and Low-Risk Infants.

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10.  Latent State-Trait Modeling: A New Tool to Refine Temperament Methodology.

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