Abstract
Introduction: The current study presents a psychometric evaluation of the Yale Craving Scale (YCS), a novel measure of craving for cigarettes and alcohol, respectively. The YCS is the first craving measure to use a generalized Labeled Magnitude Scale (gLMS) as the scoring format, which facilitates between-group comparisons of subjective craving and eliminates ceiling effects by assessing the full range of imaginable sensation intensities. Methods: Psychometric evaluations of the YCS for use with cigarettes (YCS Smoking) and alcohol (YCS Drinking) included assessments of latent factor structure, internal consistency, ceiling effects, and test-criterion relationships. Study samples included 493 treatment-seeking smokers and 213 heavy drinkers. Results: Factor analyses of the 5-item YCS Smoking and Drinking scores confirmed a 1-factor scale. The YCS Smoking and Drinking scores evidenced: (1) good internal consistency, (2) scalar measurement invariance within several subgroups (e.g., smoking/drinking status; nicotine/alcohol dependence), (3) convergent relationships with extant craving measures, and (4) concurrent relationships with smoking/drinking outcomes. Conclusions: These results suggest that the YCS represents a psychometrically sound scale for assessing smoking and drinking urges in dependent populations.
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Rojewski, A. M., Morean, M. E., Toll, B. A., McKee, S. A., Krishnan-Sarin, S., Green, B. G., … O’Malley, S. S. (2015). The Yale Craving Scale: Development and psychometric properties. Drug and Alcohol Dependence, 154, 158–166. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2015.06.040
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