| Literature DB >> 34376227 |
Zachary J Williams1,2,3,4, Katherine O Gotham5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Alexithymia, a personality trait characterized by difficulties interpreting emotional states, is commonly elevated in autistic adults, and a growing body of literature suggests that this trait underlies several cognitive and emotional differences previously attributed to autism. Although questionnaires such as the 20-item Toronto Alexithymia Scale (TAS-20) are frequently used to measure alexithymia in the autistic population, few studies have investigated the psychometric properties of these questionnaires in autistic adults, including whether differential item functioning (I-DIF) exists between autistic and general population adults.Entities:
Keywords: Alexithymia; Autism; Bayesian statistics; Differential item functioning; Emotion; Factor analysis; Item response theory; Measurement; Psychometric; Reliability; Validity
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34376227 PMCID: PMC8353782 DOI: 10.1186/s13229-021-00463-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Autism Impact factor: 7.509
Demographics for autistic and general population samples
| SPARK ( | HPP ( | |
|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | 30.91 (7.02) | 30.92 (13.01) |
| Sex | ||
| Male | 271 (36.5%) | 253 (35.1%) |
| Female | 472 (63.5%) | 468 (64.9%) |
| Gender identity | ||
| Cisgender man | 245 (33.0%) | – |
| Cisgender woman | 400 (53.8%) | – |
| Transgender man | 15 (2.0%) | – |
| Transgender woman | 6 (0.8%) | – |
| Non-binary | 76 (10.2%) | – |
| Non-Hispanic White | 590 (79.4%) | – |
| Education | ||
| No high school diploma | 25 (3.4%) | – |
| High school diploma/GED | 140 (18.8%) | – |
| Vocational certificate | 36 (4.8%) | – |
| Some college | 197 (26.5%) | – |
| Associate degree | 74 (10.0%) | – |
| Bachelor’s degree | 171 (23.0%) | – |
| Graduate/professional degree | 100 (13.5%) | – |
| Age of autism diagnosis (years) | 19.67 (11.17) | – |
| Current depression | 440 (59.2%) | – |
| Current anxiety | 533 (71.7%) | – |
| Current suicidality | 292 (39.3%) | – |
| Lifetime ADHD | 342 (46.0%) | – |
| TAS-20 total score | 60.55 (13.11) | 50.21 (11.21)a |
| TAS-20 total score (prorated)b | 61.26 (14.17) | 51.38 (10.92) |
| GAFS-8 latent trait score | 1.01 (1.17) | 0.01 (0.93) |
| “High alexithymia” (TAS-20 ≥ 61) | 405 (54.5%) | 123 (17.1%)a |
Continuous variables are presented as M (SD), and categorical variables are presented as N (%). All data in both samples were gathered by self-report
SPARK Simons Powering Autism Research Knowledge, HPP Human Penguin Project, ADHD attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, TAS Toronto Alexithymia Scale, GAFS-8 8-item General Alexithymia Factor Score
aParticipants in the HPP sample completed 16 items of the TAS-20, which excluded items 16, 17, 18, and 20. For comparison with the TAS-20 scores in the SPARK sample, these four items were imputed for all HPP participants using random forest imputation
bCalculated as mean of all 16 non-missing TAS-20 items multiplied by 20, for comparison with TAS-20 scores
Confirmatory factor analysis fit indices and model-based omega coefficients
| Index | TAS-20 Bifactor: SPARK | TAS-20 Bifactor: HPP | 11-item Bifactor: SPARK | 11-item Bifactor: HPP |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 590.6 (145) | 669.9 (145) | 151.6 (33) | 124.0 (33) | |
| CFIcML | 0.924 | 0.900 | ||
| TLIcML | 0.900 | 0.869 | ||
| RMSEAcML [90% CI] | 0.072 [0.066, 0.078] | 0.086 [0.081, 0.092] | 0.080 [0.069, 0.092] | 0.068 [ |
| SRMRu [90% CI] | ||||
| WRMR | 1.119 | 1.565 | ||
| |Residuals| > 0.1 | 2.60% | 8.90% | ||
| Largest residual | 0.149 | 0.225 | ||
| 0.912/0.773 | 0.914/0.741 | 0.929/0.861 | 0.925/0.952 | |
| 0.906/0.162 | 0.880/0.224 | 0.913/0.087 | 0.892/0.071 | |
| 0.854/0.145 | 0.803/0.120 | 0.800/0.163 | 0.839/0.223 | |
| 0.451/0.300 | 0.512/0.307 | – | – | |
| 0.559/0.441 | 0.692/0.689 | – | – |
Fit indices that above the a priori cutoffs for acceptable model fit (CFI/TLI > 0.95, RMSEA < 0.06, SRMR < 0.08, WRMR < 1, all residuals < 0.1) are presented in bold. TAS = Toronto Alexithymia Scale; SPARK = Simons Powering Autism Research Knowledge; HPP = Human Penguin Project; CFIcML = comparative fit index (categorical maximum likelihood estimation); TLIcML = Tucker–Lewis Index (categorical maximum likelihood estimation); RMSEAcML = root mean square error of approximation (categorical maximum likelihood estimation); SRMRu = population-unbiased standardized root mean square residual; WRMR = weighted root mean square residual; ωT = omega total (composite reliability of total score); ωH = omega hierarchical (proportion of total score variance accounted for by general factor); ωS = omega subscale (composite reliability of subscale score); ωHS = omega hierarchical subscale (proportion of subscale score variance accounted for by specific factor); DIF = difficulty identifying feelings; DDF = difficulty describing feelings; EOT = externally oriented thinking; REV = reverse-coded item method factor
aAll p values < 0.001
Differential item functioning results comparing autistic and general population adults on 9-item unidimensional model
| TAS-20 Item # | χ2(5) | wABC | ESSD | Parametersa | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 35.30 | < 0.001 | 0.089 | − 0.018 | |
| 2 | 23.18 | < 0.001 | 0.164 | 0.157 | |
| 3 | 65.10 | < 0.001 | 0.433b | 0.670b | |
| 9 | 26.03 | < 0.001 | 0.064 | − 0.021 | |
| 11 | 30.47 | < 0.001 | 0.165 | 0.001 | |
| 12 | 30.19 | < 0.001 | 0.149 | − 0.187 | |
| 13 | 57.66 | < 0.001 | 0.064 | − 0.022 | |
| 14 | 61.90 | < 0.001 | 0.031 | − 0.022 |
Results indicate omnibus Wald tests of differential item functioning using the iterative anchor-selection method of Cao et al. (2017). P values (pFDR) are corrected for a 5% false discovery rate using the Benjamini–Hochberg procedure. Parameters that were significantly different between groups when tested alone with follow-up Wald tests (pFDR < 0.05) are indicated in the Parameters column. TAS-20 = 20-item Toronto Alexithymia Scale; wABC = weighted area between curves; ESSD = expected score standardized difference (in Cohen’s d metric); a = slope parameter; d–d = item intercept parameters (i.e., item “difficulty” parameters)
aParameters in bold are larger (i.e., more discriminating for a parameters and “easier” for d parameters) in the autistic group. Larger values of a indicate that the item is more strongly related to the latent trait in autistic adults, whereas larger values of d indicate that a given item response is endorsed at lower latent trait levels in autistic adults relative to the general population
bPractically significant DIF (i.e., wABC > 0.3)
GAFS-8 graded response model parameters and equivalent factor loadings for full sample
| TAS-20 Item # | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2.802 | 3.092 | − 0.689 | − 2.740 | − 6.336 | 0.855 | 0.731 |
| 2 | 2.190 | 3.478 | 0.491 | − 0.931 | − 3.841 | 0.790 | 0.623 |
| 6 | 2.335 | 2.090 | − 0.805 | − 2.413 | − 5.497 | 0.808 | 0.653 |
| 9 | 2.402 | 3.137 | 0.072 | − 1.434 | − 5.170 | 0.816 | 0.666 |
| 11 | 1.870 | 2.745 | − 0.234 | − 1.505 | − 4.340 | 0.740 | 0.547 |
| 12 | 1.235 | 1.739 | − 0.526 | − 1.636 | − 3.644 | 0.587 | 0.345 |
| 13 | 1.892 | 2.054 | − 0.646 | − 2.231 | − 4.771 | 0.743 | 0.553 |
| 14 | 1.538 | 1.285 | − 1.133 | − 2.201 | − 4.361 | 0.671 | 0.450 |
Parameters estimated using maximum marginal likelihood based on Bock–Aitkin EM algorithm. This model contained two groups: general population (θ fixed to M = 0, SD = 1 in this group) and autistic group (mean and SD of θ free to vary), with all item parameters constrained to equality between groups. TAS-20 = 20-item Toronto Alexithymia Scale; a = slope parameter; d–d = item intercept parameters (more positive values indicate “easier” items); λ = factor loading on single factor; h2 = communality (squared factor loading)
Fig. 1Item category characteristic curves (i.e., “trace lines”) for the eight GAFS-8 items. Three of the items (TAS-20 items 11, 12, and 14) had neutral (“3”) responses that were not the most probable response at any point along the latent trait continuum, indicating that these response options were underutilized in our combined sample
Fig. 2A Estimated reliability of GAFS-8 latent trait scores across the full latent alexithymia continuum. The horizontal dashed line indicates rxx = 0.7, the a priori threshold for acceptable score reliability. Individual reliabilities for trait scores between − 2.43 and 3.53 are all greater than or equal to this cutoff, including all trait levels estimable by the GAFS-8 (i.e., θ between − 2.19 and 3.52). B Item-level information functions for GAFS-8 items. Vertical dashed lines indicate the trait levels captured by the minimum GAFS-8 score (all “0” responses, θ = − 2.19) and the maximum GAFS-8 score (all “5” responses, θ = 3.52). The sum of all item information functions equals the test information function
Zero-order and partial correlations between GAFS-8 latent trait scores and other clinical measures in SPARK sample
| Covariate | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SRS-2 | 0.642 [0.598, 0.686] | < 0.001 | 0.514 [0.458, 0.567] | < 0.001 | ||
| RBS-R SM | 0.385 [0.322, 0.444] | < 0.001 | 0.294 [0.225, 0.363] | < 0.001 | ||
| RBS-R RS | 0.432 [0.372, 0.494] | < 0.001 | 0.297 [0.228, 0.362] | < 0.001 | ||
| BDI-II | 0.420 [0.358, 0.480] | < 0.001 | 0.159 [0.086, 0.232] | 0.059 | ||
| GAD-7 | 0.423 [0.360, 0.481] | < 0.001 | 0.150 [0.082, 0.222] | 2.18 | 0.087 | |
| BFNE-S | 0.358 [0.292, 0.423] | < 0.001 | 0.105 [0.030, 0.180] | 0.446 | ||
| PHQ-15 | 0.275 [0.208, 0.346] | 0.019 | 0.093 [0.019, 0.165] | 0.579 | ||
| WHOQOL-4 | − 0.357 [− 0.419,− 0.291] | < 0.001 | − 0.113 [− 0.188,− 0.039] | 0.348 | 0.367 | |
| Suicidality | 0.303 [0.222, 0.382] | 0.009 | 0.111 [0.021, 0.198] | 0.403 | ||
| IPIP-N10 | 0.475 [0.416, 0.531] | < 0.001 | – | – | – |
All partial correlations (rp) control for neuroticism (IPIP-N10 scores) when examining the correlation between GAFS-8 scores and other variables of interest. Bayes factors indicating substantial evidence against the interval null hypothesis (i.e., r or lies within [− 0.2, 0.2] or rp lies within [− 0.1, 0.1]) are presented in bold, whereas Bayes factors indicating substantial evidence for the interval null hypothesis are presented in italics. Correlations are estimated using Bayesian methods and are presented along with 95% highest-density credible intervals (CrI). BFROPE = Bayes factor assessing interval null hypothesis that the effect falls within the region of practical equivalence (ROPE); ) = proportion of the r/rp posterior distribution falling within the ROPE, conditioned on the observed data (i.e., probability that the interval null hypothesis is true); SRS-2 = Social Responsiveness Scale—Second Edition; RBS-R = Repetitive Behavior Scale—Revised; SM = Sensory Motor (“lower-order” repetitive behaviors) subscale; RS = Ritualistic/Sameness (“higher-order” repetitive behaviors) subscale; BDI-II = Beck Depression Inventory-II; GAD-7 = Generalized Anxiety Disorder-7; BFNE-S = Brief Fear of Negative Evaluation—Short; PHQ-15 = (modified) Patient Health Questionnaire-15; WHOQOL-4 = 4-Item World Health Organization Quality of Life Score; Suicidality = BDI-II item 9 (Suicidal Thoughts or Wishes); IPIP-N10 = 10-item neuroticism scale from the international personality item pool