Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6813612 | Psychiatry Research | 2016 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Results of recent analyses of the Chapman Psychosis Proneness Scales (CPPS) have been inconsistent with regard to their factor structure. This inconsistency has involved whether the Revised Social Anhedonia Scale (SocAnh) reflects only the negative or both the negative and positive dimensions of schizotypy, along with the degree of correlation between these two dimensions. In the present study, confirmatory factor analysis was used to compare models created by Chan et al. and Kwapil et al.; a third model was constructed based on adjustments to these prior models and consideration of the schizotypy construct. Following Kwapil et al., our model allowed for bi-loading of SocAnh scale, but eliminated the correlation between positive and negative factors. Although fitness for each of the previously offered models was adequate, RMSEA and chi-square indicators suggested ideal fit for the model proposed by Kwapil and our new model, which redirects variance thought to be shared among the positive and negative dimensions to its specific source, SocAnh. The implications of these competing models with regard to our conceptualization of schizotypy are addressed. It is suggested that the cross loading of SocAnh reflects the notion of social anhedonia as the core of schizotypic personality organization.
Related Topics
Life Sciences
Neuroscience
Biological Psychiatry
Authors
Elizabeth A. Smith, P. Kevin Bolinskey, Janice P. Guidi, Kevin R. Myers, Kelly M. Schuder, Alison V. James, Daniel V. Hudak, Virgil Sheets,