The Reliability and Validity of the Turkish Version of Smartphone Impact Scale

Author:

Birinci Tansu1,Van Der Veer Pınar2ORCID,Mutlu Caner3,Mutlu Ebru Kaya4

Affiliation:

1. Istanbul Medeniyet University, Faculty of Health Sciences, Department Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation

2. Istinye University, Faculty of Health Sciences, Department of Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation, Turkey

3. Bursa Uludağ University, Faculty of Medicine, Department of Child and Adolescent Mental Health and Diseases, Turkey

4. Bandırma Onyedi Eylul University, Faculty of Health Sciences, Department of Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation, Turkey

Abstract

The Smartphone Impact Scale (SIS) was originally developed in English to determine the cognitive, affective, social, and behavioral impacts of smartphones. This study aimed to translate and cross-culturally adapt the SIS instrument into Turkish and investigate its psychometric properties. Two hundred and sixty-four young and middle-aged adults (186 females) with a mean age of 36.24 years (SD = 14.93; range, 18–65 years) were included. For cross-cultural adaptation, two bi-lingual translators used the back-translation procedure. Within a 5-to-7-day period after the first assessment, the participants completed the Turkish version of SIS (SIS-T) to evaluate test-retest reliability. Cronbach’s alpha (α) was used to assess internal consistency. The correlation between the Turkish version of the Smartphone Addiction Scale (SAS-T) and the Nottingham Health Profile was determined to check the validity. The SIS-T had a high-level internal consistency (α = 0.86) and test-retest reliability (ICC2,1 = 0.56 to 0.89 for subscales). The SIS-T subscales were correlated with the SAS-T (r = 0.31 to 0.66, p < 0.01), indicating a good concurrent validity. The results show that the SIS-T is semantically and linguistically adequate to determine smartphones' cognitive, affective, social, and behavioral impacts on young and middle-aged adults. Good internal validity and test-retest reliability of the SIS-T were defined to evaluate the impacts of smartphones among Turkish-speaking young and middle-aged adults.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Health Policy

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