Confirmatory factor analysis and psychometric properties of the Anxiety Sensitivity Index - Revised in clinical and normative populations

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Abstract

The present investigation aimed to critically examine the factor structure and psychometric properties of the Anxiety Sensitivity Index - Revised (ASI-R). Confirmatory factor analysis using a clinical sample of adults (N = 248) revealed that the ASI-R could be improved substantially through the removal of 15 problematic items in order to account for the most robust dimensions of anxiety sensitivity. This modified scale was renamed the 21-item Anxiety Sensitivity Index (21-item ASI) and reanalyzed with a large sample of normative adults (N = 435), revealing configural and metric invariance across groups. Further comparisons with other alternative models, using multi-sample analysis, indicated the 21-item ASI to be the best fitting model for both groups. There was also evidence of internal consistency, test-retest reliability, and construct validity for both samples suggesting that the 21-item ASI is a useful assessment device for investigating the construct of anxiety sensitivity in both clinical and normative populations. © 2006 Hogrefe & Huber Publishers.

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Armstrong, K. A., Khawaja, N. G., & Oei, T. P. S. (2006). Confirmatory factor analysis and psychometric properties of the Anxiety Sensitivity Index - Revised in clinical and normative populations. European Journal of Psychological Assessment, 22(2), 116–125. https://doi.org/10.1027/1015-5759.22.2.116

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