| Literature DB >> 25566392 |
Alexander Rozental1, Erik Forsell2, Andreas Svensson2, David Forsström1, Gerhard Andersson3, Per Carlbring1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Procrastination is a prevalent self-regulatory failure associated with stress and anxiety, decreased well-being, and poorer performance in school as well as work. One-fifth of the adult population and half of the student population describe themselves as chronic and severe procrastinators. However, despite the fact that it can become a debilitating condition, valid and reliable self-report measures for assessing the occurrence and severity of procrastination are lacking, particularly for use in a clinical context. The current study explored the usefulness of the Swedish version of three Internet-administered self-report measures for evaluating procrastination; the Pure Procrastination Scale, the Irrational Procrastination Scale, and the Susceptibility to Temptation Scale, all having good psychometric properties in English.Entities:
Keywords: Irrational Procrastination Scale; Procrastination; Psychometric evaluation; Pure Procrastination Scale; Susceptibility to Temptation Scale
Year: 2014 PMID: 25566392 PMCID: PMC4269972 DOI: 10.1186/s40359-014-0054-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychol ISSN: 2050-7283
Figure 1Flow chart of participants throughout the current study. IPS = Irrational Procrastination Scale.
Sociodemographic characteristics of the participants
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| Gender: | 308 (43.4) | 23 (46.0) |
| Age (years): | 38.59 (11.0) | 41.56 (9.9) |
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| Single | 208 (28.7) | 17 (34.0) |
| Married/Partner | 448 (63.1) | 28 (56.0) |
| Divorced/Widow | 42 (5.9) | 4 (8.0) |
| Other | 10 (1.4) | 1 (2.0) |
| Children: | 340 (47.9) | 22 (44.0) |
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| Middle school | 18 (2.5) | 1 (2.0) |
| High school/college | 287 (40.4) | 13 (26.0) |
| University | 372 (52.4) | 32 (64.0) |
| Postgraduate | 27 (3.8) | 4 (8.0) |
| Sick leave: | 17 (2.4) | 0 (0.0) |
| Previous psychological treatment: | 322 (45.4) | 24 (48.0) |
| Previous psychotropic medication: | 199 (28.0) | 11 (22.0) |
Note: Screening sample contains missing values on the sociodemographic characteristics of six participants and is therefore based on n = 704. However, all subsequent analyses include data from n = 710.
Original and translated versions of the self-report measures
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| English version | Swedish translation | |
| PPS1 | I delay making decisions until it’s too late |
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| PPS2 | Even after I make a decision I delay acting upon it |
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| PPS3 | I waste a lot of time on trivial matters before getting to the final decisions |
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| PPS4 | In preparation for some deadlines, I often waste time by doing other things |
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| PPS5 | Even jobs that require little else except sitting down and doing them, I find that they seldom get done for days |
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| PPS6 | I often find myself performing tasks that I had intended to do days before |
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| PPS7 | I am continually saying “I’ll do it tomorrow” |
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| PPS8 | I generally delay before starting on work I have to do |
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| PPS9 | I find myself running out of time |
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| PPS10 | I don’t get things done on time |
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| PPS11 | I am not very good at meeting deadlines |
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| PPS12 | Putting things off till the last minute has cost me money in the past |
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| English version | Swedish translation | |
| IPS1 | I put things off so long that my well-being or efficiency unnecessarily suffers |
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| IPS2 | If there is something I should do, I get to it before attending to lesser tasks (R) |
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| IPS3 | My life would be better if I did some activities or tasks earlier |
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| IPS4 | When I should be doing one thing, I will do another |
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| IPS5 | At the end of the day, I know I could have spent the time better |
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| IPS6 | I spend my time wisely (R) |
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| IPS7 | I delay tasks beyond what is reasonable |
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| IPS8 | I procrastinate |
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| IPS9 | I do everything when I believe it needs to be done (R) |
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| English version | Swedish translation | |
| STS1 | I will crave a pleasurable diversion so sharply that I find it increasingly hard to stay on track |
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| STS2 | I feel irresistibly drawn to anything interesting, entertaining, or enjoyable |
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| STS3 | I have a hard time postponing pleasurable opportunities as the gradually crop up |
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| STS4 | When an attractive diversion comes my way, I am easily swayed |
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| STS5 | My actions and words satisfy my short-term pleasures rather than my long-term goals |
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| STS6 | I get into jams because I will get entranced by some temporarily delightful activity |
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| STS7 | It takes a lot for me to delay gratification |
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| STS8 | When a task is tedious, again and again I find myself pleasantly daydreaming rather than focusing |
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| STS9 | When a temptations is right before me, the craving can be intense |
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| STS10 | I choose smaller but more immediate pleasures over those larger but more delayed |
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| STS11 | I take on new tasks that seem fun at first without thinking through the repercussions |
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Data distribution for the Irrational Procrastination Scale (IPS), the Pure Procrastination Scale (PPS), and the Susceptibility to Temptation Scale (STS)
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| 38.47 (3.62) | -0.496 | 0.070 | 0.844 |
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| 49.26 (5.69) | -0.402 | -0.231 | 0.831 |
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| 42.02 (7.07) | -0.428 | -0.017 | 0.909 |
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Note: Table of mean, skewness, kurtosis, KMO test of sampling adequacy and Bartlett’s test of sphericity.
Rotated component matrix for a two factor solution of the Irrational Procrastination Scale (IPS)
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| I put things off so long that my well-being or efficiency unnecessarily suffers | .69 | |
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| If there is something I should do, I get to it before attending to lesser tasks (R) | .72 | |
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| My life would be better if I did some activities or tasks earlier | .68 | |
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| When I should be doing one thing, I will do another | .55 | |
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| At the end of the day, I know I could have spent the time better | .64 | |
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| I spend my time wisely (R) | .43 | .46 |
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| I delay tasks beyond what is reasonable | .64 | |
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| I procrastinate | .64 | |
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| I do everything when I believe it needs to be done (R) | .79 |
Note: Items designated with an (R) are reversed, meaning that a score of 5 instead equals 1. Extraction method: Principal component analysis. Rotation method: Varimax-rotation with Keiser normalization. Coefficients smaller than .40 are suppressed.
Rotated component matrix for the two factor solution of the Pure Procrastination Scale (PPS)
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| I delay making decisions until it’s too late | .67 | |
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| Even after I make a decision I delay acting upon it | .44 | |
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| I waste a lot of time on trivial matters before getting to the final decisions | .68 | |
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| In preparation for some deadlines, I often waste time by doing other things | .49 | |
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| Even jobs that require little else except sitting down and doing them, I find that they seldom get done for days | .72 | |
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| I often find myself performing tasks that I had intended to do days before | .45 | |
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| I am continually saying “I’ll do it tomorrow” | .57 | |
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| I generally delay before starting on work I have to do | .77 | |
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| I find myself running out of time | .53 | |
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| I don’t get things done on time | .59 | |
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| I am not very good at meeting deadlines | .64 | |
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| Putting things off till the last minute has cost me money in the past | .46 |
Note: Extraction method: Principal component analysis. Rotation method: Varimax-rotation with Keiser normalization. Coefficients smaller than .40 are suppressed.
Correlates between factor scores for the Pure Procrastination Scale (PPS) two factor solution and the other scales
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| 0.31 | 0.28 | -0.27 | 0.35 | 0.29 |
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| 0.15 | 0.10 | -0.07 | 0.54 | 0.33 |
Note: All correlations are significant, p < .01. Factor 1 includes failure to meet deadlines and being too late whilst factor 2 seems to strictly deal with irrational delay.
Reliability and correlates among instruments
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| 38.47 | 3.62 | 0.76 | |||||
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| 49.26 | 5.69 | 0.78 | 0.61 (0.79) | ||||
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| 42.02 | 7.07 | 0.87 | 0.32 (0.39) | 0.44 (0.53) | |||
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| 8.31 | 5.26 | 0.88 | 0.30 (0.37) | 0.35 (0.42) | 0.26 (0.30) | ||
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| 16.47 | 7.69 | 0.83 | 0.26 (0.33) | 0.28 (0.35) | 0.17 (0.20) | 0.66 (0.77) | |
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| 0.41 | 1.73 | 0.79 | -0.19 (-0.25) | -0.25 (0.32) | -0.17 (-0.21) | -0.40 (-0.48) | -0.59 (-0.73) |
Note: The correlations are reported uncorrected, and in parentheses when corrected for attenuation due to unreliability. All correlations are significant, p < 0.01.