Literature DB >> 25612626

Psychometric Comparison of Self- and Informant-Reports of Personality.

Thomas M Olino1, Daniel N Klein2.   

Abstract

Self-reports are the most relied on assessment method in psychology. In the area of personality, informant-reports are a reasonable alternative assessment strategy. However, agreement between self- and informant-reports of personality is only moderately good. A portion of the observed discrepancies between self- and informant-reports of personality may come from differences in psychometric measurement across raters. That is, it is unknown whether the constructs assessed via self- and informant-reports are psychometrically identical. We examined four key personality scales--Well-Being, Social Closeness, Stress Reaction, and Harm Avoidance--in male and female dyads who provided self- and informant-reports for their partner. Similarities in self- and informant-reports of personality were evaluated by testing measurement invariance. Overall, models supported configural, metric, and scalar invariance for each of the four personality dimensions. These results suggest that the same psychometric constructs are assessed via self- and informant-reports of these personality dimensions. Informant-reports can be used in studies to avoid biases from relying solely on self-reports.
© The Author(s) 2015.

Entities:  

Keywords:  informant-reports; measurement invariance; personality; self-reports

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 25612626      PMCID: PMC5248555          DOI: 10.1177/1073191114567942

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Assessment        ISSN: 1073-1911


  38 in total

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