The Sensory Gating Inventory-Brief

Author:

Bailey Allen J1,Moussa-Tooks Alexandra B12ORCID,Klein Samuel D3,Sponheim Scott R345,Hetrick William P126

Affiliation:

1. Psychological & Brain Sciences, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN, USA

2. Department of Neuroscience, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN, USA

3. Department of Psychology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA

4. Minneapolis VA Health Care System, Minneapolis, MN, USA

5. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA

6. Department of Psychiatry, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, IN, USA

Abstract

Abstract The Sensory Gating Inventory (SGI) is a 36-item measure used to assess an individual’s subjective ability to modulate, filter, over-include, discriminate, attend to, and tolerate sensory stimuli. Due to its theoretical and empirical link with sensory processing deficits, this measure has been used extensively in studies of psychosis and other psychopathology. The current work fills a need within the field for a briefer measure of sensory gating aberrations that maintains the original measure’s utility. For this purpose, large samples (total n = 1552) were recruited from 2 independent sites for item reduction/selection and brief measure validation, respectively. These samples reflected subgroups of individuals with a psychosis-spectrum disorder, at high risk for a psychosis-spectrum disorder, nonpsychiatric controls, and nonpsychosis psychiatric controls. Factor analyses and item-response models were used to create the SGI-Brief (SGI-B; 10 Likert-rated items), a unidimensional self-report measure that retains the original SGI’s transdiagnostic (ie, present across disorders) utility and content breadth. Findings show that the SGI-B has excellent psychometric properties (alpha = 0.92) and demonstrates external validity through strong associations with measures of psychotic symptomatology, theoretically linked measures of personality (eg, perceptual dysregulation), and modest associations with laboratory-based sensory processing tasks in the auditory and visual domains on par with the original version. Accordingly, the SGI-B will be a valuable tool for dimensional and transdiagnostic examination of sensory gating abnormalities within clinical science research, while reducing administrator and participant burden.

Funder

National Institute of Mental Health

National Institute on Drug Abuse

Mental Health Patient Service Line at the VA Minneapolis Healthcare Systems

Veterans Health Administration Clinical Science Research and Development Program

Indiana Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute

U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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