| Literature DB >> 27036956 |
Álvaro I Langer1,2, Valentina G Ulloa3, José M Aguilar-Parra4, Claudio Araya-Véliz5, Gonzalo Brito6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Recent studies have associated positive emotions with several variables such as learning, coping strategies or assertive behaviour. The concept of gratitude has been specifically defined as a tendency to recognise and respond to people or situations with grateful emotion. Unfortunately in Latin America, no validated measures of gratitude on different populations are available. The aim of this study was to analyse the psychometric properties of the Gratitude Questionnaire (GQ-6) in two Chilean samples.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescence; Confirmatory factor analysis; Gratitude; Positive psychology; Validity
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27036956 PMCID: PMC4815209 DOI: 10.1186/s12955-016-0450-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Qual Life Outcomes ISSN: 1477-7525 Impact factor: 3.186
Exploratory factor analysis of the one-factor solution by principal components and with varimax rotation
| Item | Component 1 |
|---|---|
| 1. I have so much in life to be thankful for. | .838 |
| 2. If I had to list everything that I felt grateful for, it would be a very long list. | .812 |
| 3. When I look at the world, I don’t see much to be grateful for. | .303 |
| 4. I am grateful to a wide variety of people. | .701 |
| 5. As I get older I find myself better able to appreciate the people, events, and situations that have been part of my life history. | .749 |
| 6. Long amounts of time can go by before I feel grateful to something or someone. | .079 (removed) |
Items 3 and 6 are reversed
Monte Carlo parallel analyses from the items of the GQ-6 in adolescents (study 1) and adults (study 2)
| Measures | Factor | Raw data | 95th percentile | Variance explained (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| GQ-5 Adolescents | Factor 1 | 2.551398 | 1.110693 | 50.12 |
| Factor 2 | 0.939809 | 1.047406 | ||
| GQ-6 Adults | Factor 1 | 3.550826 | 1.262570 | 59.18 |
| Factor 2 | 0.781836 | 1.150883 |
Goodness of fit indexes for model 1 (6 items) and model 2 (5 items)
| Model |
|
|
|
| n | CFI | TLI | IFI | RMSEA (CI 90 %) | SRMR |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Model 1 | 78.864 | 9 | 8.76 | .000 | 665 | .919 | .865 | .919 | .108 (.087–.131) | .065 |
| Model 2 | 21.807 | 5 | 4.36 | .001 | 665 | .979 | .958 | .979 | .071 (.042–.103) | .029 |
Fig. 1Confirmatory Factor Analysis of the one-factor model with 5 items. Residual variances are shown in the small circles on the right. Note* The oval represents the unique factor and the rectangles represent the five different items. The residual variances are shown in the small circles on the right
Analysis of invariance by gender (GQ-5)
| Models |
|
|
| Δχ2 | Δ | CFI | TLI | IFI | RMSEA | SRMR |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Model 1 | 28.948 | 10 | 2.89 | - | - | .977 | .954 | .977 | .053 | .022 |
| Model 2 | 43.867 | 14 | 3.13 | 14.91** | 4 | .964 | .948 | .964 | .057 | .050 |
| Model 3 | 46.753 | 15 | 3.11 | 17.80** | 5 | .961 | .949 | .962 | .057 | .059 |
| Model 4 | 60.582 | 20 | 3.02 | 31.63*** | 10 | .951 | .951 | .951 | .055 | .060 |
**p < .01; ***p < .001; Model 1: Unconstrained Model; Model 2: Measurement Weights Model; Model 3: Structural Covariances Model; Model 4: Measurement Residuals Model
Correlations and regression between gratitude in adolescents and mental health outcomes
| BDI depressive symptoms | EAT-26 risk of eating disorder | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| GQ-5 |
| .141 | .011 |
|
| -.228 | -.051 | |
|
| .022 | .019 | |
| β | -.375 | -.106 | |
|
| .000 | .007 | |
SE: Standard error; β: Beta standardised
Fig. 2Confirmatory factor analysis GQ-6 in the adult sample. Note* The oval represents the unique factor and the rectangles represent the six different items. The residual variances are shown in the small circles on the right
Analysis of invariance by gender (GQ-6)
| Models |
|
|
| Δχ2 | Δ | CFI | TLI | IFI | RMSEA | SRMR |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Model 1 | 47.732 | 18 | 2.65 | - | - | .964 | .939 | .939 | .071 | .030 |
| Model 2 | 58.452 | 23 | 2.54 | 10.72* | 5 | .957 | .943 | .943 | .068 | .068 |
| Model 3 | 69.119 | 24 | 2.88 | 21.38** | 6 | .945 | .931 | .931 | .076 | .078 |
| Model 4 | 144.642 | 30 | 4.82 | 96.90*** | 12 | .859 | .859 | .859 | .108 | .092 |
*p < .05; **p < .01; ***p < .001; Model 1: Unconstrained Model; Model 2: Measurement Weights Model; Model 3: Structural Covariances Model; Model 4: Measurement Residuals Model
Correlations and regression between gratitude in adult and mental health outcomes
| DASS Depression | DASS Anxiety | DASS Stress | PANAS Negative affect | PANAS Positive affect | SHS Happiness | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
| |||||
| GQ-6 |
| -.529** | -.339** | -.248** | -.331** | .384** | .655** |
|
| .279 | .115 | .061 | .109 | .147 | .429 | |
|
| -.864 | -.233 | -.359 | −2.110 | 2.843 | .751 | |
|
| .092 | .114 | .077 | .422 | .446 | .048 | |
| β | -.591 | -.134 | -.248 | -.253 | .323 | .655 | |
|
| .000 | .041 | .000 | .000 | .000 | .000 | |
DASS: depression, anxiety and stress scale; PANAS: positive and negative affect schedule; SHS: subjective happiness scale; R: Pearson correlation; SE: standard error; β: beta standardised; **p < .01