Harmonizing bifactor models of psychopathology between distinct assessment instruments: Reliability, measurement invariance, and authenticity

Author:

Hoffmann Maurício Scopel1234ORCID,Moore Tyler Maxwell5,Axelrud Luiza Kvitko23,Tottenham Nim6,Rohde Luis Augusto278,Milham Michael Peter910,Satterthwaite Theodore Daniel511,Salum Giovanni Abrahão237810

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neuropsychiatry Universidade Federal de Santa Maria Santa Maria Brazil

2. Graduate Program in Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul Porto Alegre Brazil

3. Section on Negative Affect and Social Processes Hospital de Clínicas de Porto Alegre Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul Porto Alegre Brazil

4. Care Policy and Evaluation Centre London School of Economics and Political Science London UK

5. Department of Psychiatry University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

6. Department of Psychology Columbia University New York New York USA

7. National Institute of Developmental Psychiatry for Children and Adolescents (INCT‐CNPq) São Paulo Brazil

8. Department of Psychiatry and Legal Medicine Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul Porto Alegre Brazil

9. Nathan S. Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research Orangeburg New York USA

10. Center for the Developing Brain Child Mind Institute New York New York USA

11. Lifespan Informatics and Neuroimaging Center Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesModel configuration is important for mental health data harmonization. We provide a method to investigate the performance of different bifactor model configurations to harmonize different instruments.MethodsWe used data from six samples from the Reproducible Brain Charts initiative (N = 8,606, ages 5–22 years, 41.0% females). We harmonized items from two psychopathology instruments, Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) and GOASSESS, based on semantic content. We estimated bifactor models using confirmatory factor analysis, and calculated their model fit, factor reliability, between‐instrument invariance, and authenticity (i.e., the correlation and factor score difference between the harmonized and original models).ResultsFive out of 12 model configurations presented acceptable fit and were instrument‐invariant. Correlations between the harmonized factor scores and the original full‐item models were high for the p‐factor (>0.89) and small to moderate (0.12–0.81) for the specific factors. 6.3%–50.9% of participants presented factor score differences between harmonized and original models higher than 0.5 z‐score.ConclusionsThe CBCL‐GOASSESS harmonization indicates that few models provide reliable specific factors and are instrument‐invariant. Moreover, authenticity was high for the p‐factor and moderate for specific factors. Future studies can use this framework to examine the impact of harmonizing instruments in psychiatric research.

Funder

National Institute of Mental Health

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health

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