E. Daleiden et al., Assessment of tripartite factors of emotion in children and adolescents II: Concurrent validity of the affect and arousal scales for children, J PSYCHOPAT, 22(2), 2000, pp. 161-182
Citations number
36
Categorie Soggetti
Psycology
Journal title
JOURNAL OF PSYCHOPATHOLOGY AND BEHAVIORAL ASSESSMENT
The authors assessed the reliability and validity of the Affect and Arousal
Scale for Children (AFARS; Chorpita, Daleiden Moffitt, Yim, & Umemoto, 200
0). The AFARS is a new measure of children's positive affect (PA), negative
affect (NA), and physiological hyperarousal (PH). In the first study, 176
school children, 7 to 17 years of age, were administered measures of childh
ood worry, anxiety sensitivity and autonomic arousal and their parents comp
leted a child behavior problem checklist. In a second study, two groups of
100 and 114 school children, 8 to 18 years of age, were administered measur
es of childhood depression and anxiety, respectively, Also, 120 of these ch
ildren took part in a 1-week retest administration of the AFARS. These stud
ies provided preliminary evidence of acceptable 1-week test-retest reliabil
ity, convergent validity, and discriminant validity for the AFARS PA, NA, a
nd PH scales. However, the predicted pattern of convergent and discriminant
relations with parent-reported criterion only emerged for children over II
years of age. Further, a consistent positive relation emerged between NA a
nd PH, yet each of these scales accounted for unique variance in the predic
tion of criterion measures.