| Literature DB >> 29113776 |
Eduardo Fonseca-Pedrero1, Javier Ortuño-Sierra2, Beatriz Lucas-Molina3, Martin Debbané4, Raymond C K Chan5, David C Cicero6, Lisa C Zhang7, Colleen Brenner7, Emma Barkus8, Richard J Linscott9, Thomas Kwapil10, Neus Barrantes-Vidal11, Alex Cohen12, Adrian Raine13, Michael T Compton14, Erin B Tone15, Julie Suhr16, Julio Bobes17, Axit Fumero18, Stella Giakoumaki19, Ioannis Tsaousis19, Antonio Preti20, Michael Chmielewski21, Julien Laloyaux22, Anwar Mechri23, Mohamed Aymen Lahmar23, Viviana Wuthrich24, Frank Larøi22, Johanna C Badcock25, Assen Jablensky26, David Barron27, Viren Swami28, Ulrich S Tran29, Martin Voracek29.
Abstract
The Schizotypal Personality Questionnaire-Brief (SPQ-B) was developed with the aim of examining variations in healthy trait schizotypy, as well as latent vulnerability to psychotic-spectrum disorders. No previous study has studied the cross-cultural validity of the SPQ-B in a large cross-national sample. The main goal of the present study was to analyze the reliability and the internal structure of SPQ-B scores in a multinational sample of 28,426 participants recruited from 14 countries. The mean age was 22.63years (SD=7.08; range 16-68years), 37.7% (n=10,711) were men. The omega coefficients were high, ranging from 0.86 to 0.92 for the total sample. Confirmatory factor analysis revealed that SPQ-B items were grouped either in a theoretical structure of three first-order factors (Cognitive-Perceptual, Interpersonal, and Disorganized) or in a bifactor model (three first-order factors plus a general factor of schizotypal personality). In addition, the results supported configural but not strong measurement invariance of SPQ-B scores across samples. These findings provide new information about the factor structure of schizotypal personality, and support the validity and utility of the SPQ-B, a brief and easy tool for assessing self-reported schizotypal traits, in cross-national research. Theoretical and clinical implications for diagnostic systems, psychosis models, and cross-national mental health strategies are derived from these results.Entities:
Keywords: Cross-cultural; Psychosis; Psychosis risk; SPQ-B; Schizotypal personality; Schizotypy
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29113776 DOI: 10.1016/j.schres.2017.10.043
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Schizophr Res ISSN: 0920-9964 Impact factor: 4.939