Internal Consistency, Retest Reliability, and Their Implications for Personality Scale Validity
2010; SAGE Publishing; Volume: 15; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1177/1088868310366253
ISSN1088-8683
AutoresRobert R. McCrae, John E. Kurtz, Shinji Yamagata, Antonio Terracciano,
Tópico(s)Personality Disorders and Psychopathology
ResumoThe authors examined data ( N = 34,108) on the differential reliability and validity of facet scales from the NEO Inventories. They evaluated the extent to which (a) psychometric properties of facet scales are generalizable across ages, cultures, and methods of measurement, and, (b) validity criteria are associated with different forms of reliability. Composite estimates of facet scale stability, heritability, and cross-observer validity were broadly generalizable. Two estimates of retest reliability were independent predictors of the three validity criteria; none of three estimates of internal consistency was. Available evidence suggests the same pattern of results for other personality inventories. Internal consistency of scales can be useful as a check on data quality but appears to be of limited utility for evaluating the potential validity of developed scales, and it should not be used as a substitute for retest reliability. Further research on the nature and determinants of retest reliability is needed.
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