Title: New Advances in Measurement
1New Advances in Measurement
2TOPICS
- RELATIONSHIP QUALITY
- T1 IRT Optimization
- Study 1
- T2 Responsiveness to Change
- Studies 2-5
- T3 Bi-Dimensional View
- Studies 6-7
- T4 Implicit Measures
- Studies 8-11
- ATTENTION
- T5 Screening for Error Variance
- Studies 12-16
3Acknowledgements
- Couples Satisfaction Index
- Janette Funk, Mike Maniaci, Maria Saavedra,
Soonhee Lee - Positive-Negative Relationship Quality
- Frank Fincham, Richard Mattson, Matt Johnson
- C.A.R.E. Program
- Tom Bradbury, Rebecca Cobb, Matt Johnson, Erika
Lawrence, Lisa Story, Lexi Rothman - Implicit Assessment
- Soonhee Lee, Harry Reis
- Attention / Effort
- Mike Maniaci, Janette Funk, Soonhee Lee, Maria
Saavedra
4Relationship Quality
- Relationship satisfaction
- Self-report scales (DAS, MAT, QMI)
- 30-50 years of research (over 4K studies)
- Excellent correlational validity
- Level of noise?
- Responsive to change over time?
- Are these the best items?
5TOPIC 1 IRT Optimization
- Large sample method
- N at least 1,000 in smallest group
- Large item pool
- Unidimensional
- Non-redundant
- Used by ETS
- SAT, GRE, MCAT, LSAT
- Quality of each item
- Information
- Noise
- Advantages
- Over correlations
- Over small sample methods
6IRT Approach
- Latent scores (q) for each subject
- Like GRE scores
- Assessing relationship satisfaction
- Parameters for each item
- Response curves
- Higher qs ? higher responses?
- Item Responsiveness
- How informative?
- Where informative?
- Creates information profiles
- For individual items
- For sets of items
7Study 1 - Measures
- 141 satisfaction items
- DAS, MAT, RAS, KMS, QMI, SMD
- 71 additional items
- 7 anchor scales
- Neuroticism (EPQ-N)
- Conflict / Communication (MCI, CPQ, IAI)
- Stress (PSS)
- Sexual Chemistry (Eros)
- Instability (MSI)
- 2 validity scales
- Inconsistency (PAI)
- Infrequency (PAI)
8Study 1 - Sample
- 5,315 online respondents
- After removing
- Incomplete or invalid responses
- Multivariate outliers
- 26yo (10yrs)
- 83 Female
- 76 Caucasian
- 26 High school ed. or lower
- 27K average income
- 24 married, 16 engaged, 60 dating
9Evaluating Previous Scales
- IRT results
- Simultaneous analysis
- 66 items of existing scales
- Some very informative items
- Many poor items
10DAS-31 (Degree of happiness, all things
considered, of your relationship)
Response Curves
Information Curve
11DAS/MAT 5Agreement on FRIENDS
Response Curves
Information Curve
12MAT 12In leisure time, do you (and does your
mate) prefer to be on the go or to stay at home?
Response Curves
Information Curve
13From Items to Scales
- A scales information
- sum of information from each item
- How informative
- Across different levels of happiness
14Test Info for Current Measures
15Analysis of Existing Measures
- Many uninformative items
- Particularly for DAS and MAT
- ? noise / error
- Modest test information
- For all scales
- Notably poor for MAT and DAS
- Room for improvement
16Creating the CSI
- 141 item pool
- Screen for contaminating items
- Screen for redundant items
- IRT on remaining 66 items
- Select 32 most effective
17Test Info for CSI Scales
18Basic Psychometrics
Alpha Distress Cut Score Correlations Correlations Correlations Correlations Correlations Correlations
Alpha Distress Cut Score 1 2 3 4 5 6
1. DAS .94 97.5 -- -- -- -- -- --
2. MAT .84 95.5 .90 -- -- -- -- --
3. QMI .96 24.5 .85 .87 -- -- -- --
4. RAS .92 23.5 .86 .87 .91 -- -- --
5. CSI-32 .98 104.5 .91 .91 .94 .96 -- --
6. CSI-16 .98 51.5 .89 .90 .96 .95 .98 --
7. CSI-4 .94 13.5 .87 .88 .93 .94 .97 .97
19Correlations with Anchors
Arguing IAI Instability MSI Comm. CPQ Stress PSS Conflict MCI Sexual Chemistry EROS Neuroticism EPQN
DAS -.79 -.74 .73 -.53 -.54 .42 -.40
MAT -.76 -.74 .69 -.49 -.49 .41 -.38
CSI 32 -.79 -.78 .71 -.52 -.48 .45 -.38
CSI 16 -.80 -.78 .71 -.53 -.49 .43 -.38
20What have we gained?
- Identical correlational results
- Strong convergent validity
- Strong discriminant validity
- Strong construct validity
- ? Measuring same thing
- Higher information
- ? Should have
- Lower Noise
- Higher Precision
- Greater Power
21Satisfaction Groups
- IRT satisfaction estimates
- For each subject
- Based on MAT, DAS, CSI items
- (equivalent of GRE scores)
- Created satisfaction groups
- N 265
- HIGHLY similar SAT within each group
- MAT, DAS CSI scores also similar?
22Precision CSI-32 vs. DAS
23Effect Size
- Ability to detect difference
- Between groups
- Pre Post
- Effect Size M1 M2 .
- pooled SD
- Difference in SD units
- Power for detecting Ds in SAT groups
24Power CSI-32 vs. DAS
25STUDY 1 - Conclusions
- CROSS-SECTIONALLY
- CSI assess same construct
- Higher precision
- Higher power
- NEXT STEP
- Longitudinal analysis
- Responsiveness to change over time
26TOPIC 2 Responsiveness
- Detecting change
- Assumption
- Longitudinal
- External Criteria
- Treatment effect
- Clinician
- Interviewer
- Global report
- SERM (Sdiff)
- Noise over time
- Estimating
- Two main applications
- Individual change
- Clinically distinct groups
27Studies 2 through 4
- Study 2
- 267 online respondents
- 1 2wk follow ups
- 468 change scores
- Study 3
- 156 online respondents
- 1, 2, 3, 4, 6 12mo follow ups
- 455 change scores
- Study 4
- 545 online respondents
- 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 9 12mo follow ups
- 1,552 change scores
28Studies 2-4 Measures
- Relationship satisfaction scales
- DAS-32
- MAT-15
- CSI-32
- CSI-16
- CSI-4
- 3 global relationship change items
- Change since last assessment
29Individual Change
- How many points of change needed?
- (to show significant change)
- SERM in No Change
- RCI (Jacobson Truax, 1991)
- MDC95 (Stratford et al., 1996)
- MDC95 (SD units) 1.96SERM .
- SD
- PRESENTING
- Meta-Analytic Summary
- Standardized Units
30Reliable Individual Change
C
C
C
B
A
31Detecting Change
- Individual Change
- IRT optimization
- Longer scales
- Distinct Groups
- Can scales distinguish?
- Mild deterioration
- No change
- Mild improvement
32Perceived Change
MuchWORSE SomewhatWORSE A littleWORSE Stayed the SAME A little BETTER Somewhat BETTER Much BETTER
-3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3
- How much have these changed?
- Overall happiness in the relationship
- Feeling close and connected
- Stability of the relationship
33Perceived Change
MuchWORSE SomewhatWORSE A littleWORSE Stayed the SAME A little BETTER Somewhat BETTER Much BETTER
-3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3
SignificantDeterioration SignificantDeterioration MinimalDeter. NoChange MinimalImprove. SignificantImprovement SignificantImprovement
- Averaged responses
- Alpha .92
- Created change groups
34Distinct Change Groups
35Quantifying Group-Level Responsiveness
- MCID
- (Guyatt, Walter Norman, 1987)
- Noise over time (SERM)
- Effect Sizes
- (Avg Change)IMPROVE (Avg Change)NO CHANGE
-
- SERM
- (Avg Change)DETERIORATE (Avg Change)NO CHANGE
-
- SERM
36Analytic Strategy
- Improving method
- Multi-wave data
- Global change continuous
- Moderation
- HLM
- PV Global change score
- Moderators
- Gender
- T0 Satisfaction
- DV Change scores on scales (n 2475)
- ? Change scores 1pt global change
- ? MCID effect sizes
- Meta-Analytic Summary
37Responsiveness in Dissatisfied (1SD below M)
A
B
C
C
C
D
C
B
A
A
38Responsiveness in Satisfied (1SD above M)
A
A
B
B
B
E
D
C
B
A
39Responsiveness Conclusions
- Can be quantified
- Scale selection
- Power estimates
- Responsive scales
- Greater power
- Individual
- Group
- Cross-sectional ? Longitudinal
- Precision Power translate
- NEXT STEP ? Treatment Effects
40Topic 3 Bi-Dimensional View
- Uni-Dimensional view
- Positive feelings opposite negative feelings
- Bi-Dimensional view
- Pos/Neg independent
- Moderately dissatisfied
- Ambivalent
- Indifferent
- Uni-Dimensional obscuring?
41Background
- Fincham Linfield (1997)
- PN-QIMS
- Two 3-item scales
- Qualities of spouse
- Feelings toward spouse
- Feelings about marriage
- Considering only (pos/neg)
- Separated in survey
- CFA in 123 couples
- Unique information
42Study 5
- Mattson et al. (under review)
- New pos-neg scale
- 7 SMD items of CSI
- Pos / neg separately
- Large online sample
- Ambivalent
- Indifferent
Positive Items Positive Items Negative Items Negative Items
InterestingEnjoyable Friendly Hopeful Sturdy Good Full Boring Miserable Lonely Discouraging Fragile Bad Empty
43Study 5 - Sample
- 1656 online respondents
- Demographics
- 28yo (7yrs)
- 94 Female
- 87 Caucasian
- 30k income
- 5 high school
- Romantic relationships
- 38 married (6.5yrs)
- 19 engaged (3.6yrs)
- 41 dating exclusive (2.4yrs)
44Ambivalence vs. Indifference
Positives Positives
High Low
Negatives Low Satisfied Indifferent
Negatives High Ambivalent Distressed
45Ambivalence vs. Indifference
Positives Positives
High Low
Negatives Low Satisfied Indifferent
Negatives High Ambivalent Distressed
46Uni-Dimensional Satisfaction
47Negative Conflict
48Negative Affect
49Study 6
- IRT Optimized Positive Negative Scales
- Item Pools
- 20 positive items
- 20 negative items
- Large sample
- UG respondents
- Analyses
- EFA
- Redundancy
- IRT
- Precision / Power / Validity
50Study 6 - Sample
- 1,814 undergrad respondents
- Demographics
- 19yo (2yrs)
- 77 Female
- 72 Caucasian
- Together 2.6yrs
- 26 dissatisfied
- Close relationships
- 54 romantic partners
- 38 friends
- 5 family members
- 3 roommates
- Romantic relationships
- 76 dating exclusive
- 21 dating non-exclusive
51Positive-Negative Relationship Qualities
- New PN-RQ scales
- Best 4 8 items by IRT
Positive Items Positive Items Negative Items Negative Items
Enjoyable Pleasant Strong Alive Fun Full Exciting Energizing Bad Empty Miserable Lifeless Discouraging Unpleasant Weak Dull
52PN-RQ Correlations
CSI-4 Pos-RQ Neg-RQ
CSI-4 1
Pos-RQ .68 1
Neg-RQ -.55 -.47 1
53Information Provided
54NEG Information Provided
55Power Positive-Quality Groups
56Power Negative-Quality Groups
57Uni-Dimensional Satisfaction
58Negative Conflict
59Forgivingness
60PN-RQ
- Power from Optimization
- More precise
- Unique Information
- Ambivalent vs. Indifferent
- NEXT Responsiveness
61Study 7
- PREP
- Psycho-educational workshop
- Speaker-Listener Technique
- CARE
- Psycho-educational workshop
- Acceptance based techniques (IBCT)
- Awareness
- Self-guided
- Semi-strutured
- No Treatment
62Study 7
- 173 Newlywed couples
- Engaged or married lt6mo
- Screened for severe discord (MAT below 85)
- Demographics
- AGE 29
- Caucasian H 58 W 54
- Latino/a H 17 W 23
- Asian Am H 9 W 11
- African Am H 5 W 5
- Assessed
- MAT, PN-QIMS
- 6 points over 3yrs
63Slope-Intercept HLM Results
- MAT
- Drops over time for Men
- Negative Qualities
- ns
- Positive Qualities
- Drops only in No Treatment
- TX Sig better slopes in Men
64Bi-Dimensional View
- Distinct individuals
- Distinct treatment effects
- Enhance
- Theories
- Clinical work
65Topic 4 Implicit Assessment
- Limitations of Self-Report
- Insight
- Biases
- Limitations of Observational Coding
- Costly
- Evaluation apprehension
- Not all constructs observable
- Implicit assessment
- Indirect
- Inexpensive
- Unique insights
66Previous Work
- Me/Not-Me task
- Aron, Aron, Tudor, Nelson (1991), Aron
Fraley (1999), Slotter Gardner (2009) - Rxn Time on Evaluations
- Fincham, Garnier, Gano-Phillips, Osborne
(1995) - Partner-focused IAT
- Zayas Shoda (2005)
- Banse Kowalick (2007)
- Scinta Gable (2007)
- Self-focused IAT
- Dewitt, de Houwer, Buysse (2008)
- Sequential priming task
- Scinta Gable (2007)
67Go/No-Go Association Task
- Partner-GNAT
- Sort three types of words
- Good
- Bad
- Partner
- Presented
- One at a time
- In random order
- Spacebar for targets
68GNAT Stimuli
- Partner words
- First name
- Nick name
- Pet name / Distinguishing characteristic
Good Words Bad Words
Studies 8 10 PeaceGiftVacation DeathAccidentTragedy
Study 9 AcceptingSharingUnderstanding AttackingNaggingCriticizing
69GNAT Procedure
- Procedure
- Obtain partner stimuli
- Sorting task
- 16 practice trials good as target
- 16 practice trials bad as target
- 70 trials partner good as targets
- 70 trials partner bad as targets
- Complete counterbalancing
CriticalTrials
70GNAT
- Fast task (600msec)
- Accuracy
- D index
-
- Proposed
- High performance on P-good
- ? Strong positive implicit attitude
- High performance on P-bad
- ? Strong negative implicit attitude
71Studies 8 9 Samples
- Study 8
- 122 online respondents
- 39 married (for 3.3yrs)
- 13 engaged (together for 2.7yrs)
- 58 dating (for 2.4yrs)
- 79 Caucasian
- 87 Female
- 43 provided follow-up data
- 8 ended their relationships
- Study 9
- 100 online respondents
- 10 married (for 3.6yrs)
- 12 engaged (together for 3.2yrs)
- 77 dating (for 1.8yrs)
- 77 Caucasian
- 86 Female
- 63 provided follow-up data
- 11 ended their relationships
72Method Variance
- P-good and P-bad
- r .45
- Shared method variance
- Ability
- Effort
- Attention
- Comfort with computers
- Enter as pairs
- Simultaneous PVs
- Partial correlations
- Shared variance dropped
- Examine interaction
- Pos Neg attitudes might interact
73Study 8 Correlations
Initial Self Reports Initial Self Reports Initial Self Reports
Relationship Satisfaction Negative Conflict Neuroticism
Partner-Good .14 -.05 .00
Partner-Bad -.21 .12 .03
74Studies 8 9 Analytic Strategy
- Discrete-time hazard modeling in HGLM
LEVEL 1 Prob(Breakup) P log P/(1-P)
p0 p1(time) e
75Study 8 Prediction of Relationship Breakup over
1 year
B SE p Odds Ratio
Intercept Intercept Intercept Intercept Intercept Intercept
Intercept1 -4.14 0.36 .001 0.02
Predicting Breakups over 1 Year Predicting Breakups over 1 Year Predicting Breakups over 1 Year Predicting Breakups over 1 Year Predicting Breakups over 1 Year Predicting Breakups over 1 Year
Intercept2 2.21 0.51 .001 9.12
Relationship Satisfaction -0.05 0.03 .065 0.95
Neuroticism 0.10 0.10 .342 1.10
Hostile Conflict -0.07 0.07 .317 0.93
Partner with Good (d) -1.75 0.55 .002 0.17
Partner with Bad (d) 0.38 0.93 .685 1.46
P-Good X P-Bad -1.67 0.83 .048 0.19
NOTE B unstandardized beta SE standard
error. p lt .10 p lt .05
76Study 8 Probabilities of Breakup
77Study 9 Correlations
Initial Self Reports Initial Self Reports Initial Self Reports
Relationship Satisfaction Negative Conflict Neuroticism
Partner-Good .06 -.13 .00
Partner-Bad -.03 .07 .03
78Study 9 Prediction of Relationship Breakup over
1 year
B SE p Odds Ratio
Intercept Intercept Intercept Intercept Intercept Intercept
Intercept1 -3.84 0.34 .001 0.02
Predicting Breakups over 1 Year Predicting Breakups over 1 Year Predicting Breakups over 1 Year Predicting Breakups over 1 Year Predicting Breakups over 1 Year Predicting Breakups over 1 Year
Intercept2 2.69 0.48 .001 14.75
Relationship Satisfaction -0.03 0.04 .363 0.97
Neuroticism 0.13 0.11 .232 1.14
Hostile Conflict -0.03 0.04 .399 0.97
Partner with Good (d) -1.03 0.37 .007 0.36
Partner with Bad (d) 0.86 0.47 .074 2.35
P-Good X P-Bad -0.22 0.61 .717 0.80
NOTE B unstandardized beta SE standard
error. p lt .10 p lt .05
79Study 9 Probabilities of Breakup
80Studies 8 9 Summary
- Partner-GNAT
- Predicts Breakup over 1yr
- After controlling for SR scales
- Possible interaction
- Suggests
- Partner-GNAT provides unique information
- Ps unable to report
- Ps unwilling to report
- Next Step Mechanism of action
81Study 10
- Partner-GNAT
- Generic good or bad words
- Good stimuli freedom, pleasure, gift
- Bad stimuli death, accident, poverty
- Behavioral coding
- Two 10-minute Problem discussions
- Two 10-minute Social Support discussions
- Two teams of naïve coders
- Self-report data
82Coding Process
- Two separate teams (5 and 7 coders)
- Weekly meetings
- Spouses coded in separate passes
- 30sec intervals
- Global codes
- Counterbalancing
- Order of couples
- Order of spouses (within each interaction)
- Order of topics (H vs. W)
- Rated 15-18 dimensions
- All coders coded all tapes
- Codes averaged within coders interactions
- Codes averaged across coders
- Created composite codes
83Composite Codes
- Support Behavior/Affect
- Emotional Support
- Negative Behavior
- Conflict Behavior/Affect
- Empathic Listening
- Affection
- Negative Behavior
84Study 10 Sample
- 57 couples
- 48 engaged to be married (in 4.8mo)
- 52 married (for 3.7mo)
- Relationships
- Together 3.3yrs
- Highly satisfied (avg. CSI 141)
- 81 premarital cohabitation
- 93 living together at T0
- 14 had children at T0
- Demographics
- Age 28yo
- 91 Caucasian
- 53k joint income
- 9 HS education
85Study 10 Analytic Strategy
- Actor-Partner Interdependence Modeling in HLM
- Modeling trajectories over time
- Two level model
- Level 1 Individual differences
- GNAT indices
- Coded behavior
- Initial self-report
- Level 2 Dyadic variables
- Relationship length
- Number of children
86Male Emotional Support(during support
interaction)
87Male Negative Behavior (during support
interaction)
88Female Empathic Listening(during conflict
interaction)
89Female Affection(during conflict interaction)
Female Affection
90Male Negative Behavior(during conflict
interaction)
Male Negative Behavior
91Study 10 Summary
- Partner-GNAT
- Linked to own behavior
- Linked to partners behavior
- Across domains
- ? Might shape each other
- Tailoring GNAT
- Implicit assessment of attachment?
92Self Report Attachment Scales
- ECR-R
- Attachment Anxiety
- I worry a lot about my relationship
- Attachment Avoidance
- I find it difficult to allow myself to depend on
romantic partners - Difficult to disentangle
- Attachment
- Preoccupied / Dismissive Behaviors
- Requires insight / honesty
93Study 11
- Standard Battery of SR scales
- Implicit Attachment
- Partner-GNAT
- Self-GNAT
- New Valence Categories
- Relationally Worthy
- Relationally Worthless
- Hypotheses
- Partner-GNAT ? internal working model of others
- Self-GNAT ? internal working model of self
94GNAT Stimuli
- Partner words
- First name
- Nick name
- Pet name / characteristic
- Self words
- First name
- Last name
- Nick name / characteristic
Relationally Worthy Relationally Worthless
Valence Stimuli LovedLiked AgreeableAcceptedCherishedValuedAdored InferiorRejected DisagreeablePatheticUnwantedAbandonedInsignificant
95Study 11 Sample
- Recruitment underway
- First 48 couples
- 79 committed dating relationships (1.6yrs)
- 4 engaged (2.9yrs)
- 17 married (4.5yrs)
- Relationships
- Quite satisfied (CSI-16 70)
- Dissatisfied
- 6 of married
- 9 of dating
- Demographics
- Age 24yo
- 76 Caucasian
- 37k joint income
- 9 HS education
96Study 11 Correlations
Initial Self Reports Initial Self Reports Initial Self Reports
Relationship Satisfaction Attachment Anxiety Attachment Avoidance
Partner-Good .27 .01 -.23
Partner-Bad -.14 .06 .17
97Study 11 Correlations
Initial Self Reports Initial Self Reports Initial Self Reports
Relationship Satisfaction Attachment Anxiety Attachment Avoidance
Self-Good .04 .07 .03
Self-Bad .01 -.08 -.03
98Future Directions
- Unique information
- Beyond SR
- Clinically useful?
- Shapes behavior
- Longitudinal mediation?
- Change over time?
- Can be Tailored
- Attachment?
- Alternate Targets
- Family
- Friends
- Behaviors
- Moderators
- Mindfulness
- Assimilation of Partner into Self-Concept
99Topic 5 Attention / Effort
- Inattention
- Adds error / noise
- Reduces power
- Quantifying
- Large Clinical Inventories (e.g., PAI)
- Infrequency
- Inconsistency
- Experimental Research
- Instruction reading (IMC Oppenheimer, 2009)
- Survey Research
- Unknown
100Study 12
- Quantifying Inattention
- Behavioral Measures
- 7 directed responses
- 20 pronoun task
- 2min video
- Self-Report
- Inattentive
- Patterned
- Rushed
- Instruction skipping
101Study 12 - Sample
- 575 online respondents
- 54 Mturk.com
- 13 online forums
- 33 UG psychology students
- Demographics
- 29yo (12yrs)
- 70 Female
- 77 Caucasian
- 21 High School
- 30 30k / year
102Behavioral Inattention
103Self-Reported Inattention
104Distinct from Desirability
Inattention Measure Self Deception Impression Management
Mistakes on directed Qs -.16 -.16
Time watching video .11 .12
Mistakes on pronouns -.06 -.07
SR Inattentive -.30 -.34
SR Patterned -.15 -.20
SR Rushed -.28 -.24
SR Skip Instructions -.15 -.18
105Screening for Inattention
- Developing ARS
- Item pool
- Infrequent items
- Inconsistent pairs
- 3 large online samples
- Ability to discriminate
- P responses
- Random data
- Random responders
106Studies 13 through 15
- Study 13
- 1195 online respondents
- 85 female
- 77 Caucasian
- 26yo (SD 8.4)
- Study 14
- 1878 online respondents
- 91 female
- 85 Caucasian
- 28yo (SD 7.1)
- Study 15
- 547 online respondents
- 74 female
- 72 Caucasian
- 20yo (SD 1.3)
107Final ARS scales
- Two scales
- 11 infrequency items
- I enjoy the music of Marlene Sandersfield
- I look forward to my time off
- 11 inconsistency item pairs
- I am an active person
- I have an active lifestyle
- Agreement with PAI
- Study 14
- Continuous rs .64 and .83
- Categorical kappa .72
108Ability to Detect Inattention
109Convergent Validity
- Study 12 indices
- ARS inattentive respondents
- Higher on inattention indices?
- Behavioral Markers
- Self-Report
- Comparable regression results?
110ARS Inattentive Ps
Index Effect Cohens D
Directed Qs 3 more mistakes / 7 -1.43
Video Watching 40 seconds less / 120 .95
Pronouns 7 more mistakes / 20 -1.01
SR Inattentive 1.0 pts higher / 6 -.91
SR Patterned 1.3 pts higher / 7 -1.11
SR Rushed 0.7 pts higher / 7 -.60
SR Skipping Instructions 0.8 pts higher / 7 -.53
111ARS Inattentive Ps
- Robins et al. (2001)
- Big 5 ? Self Esteem
- R2 .34
- 3 sig coeffs
- Attentive Ps
- N 621
- R2 .41
- 3 sig coeffs
- Inattentive Ps
- N 55
- R2 .08 ns
- no sig coeffs
ns
112ARS Convergent Validity
- ARS inattentive respondents
- Higher inattention
- Behavioral Markers
- Self-Report
- Adding noise
- Lowering power
113Study 16
- Reading instructions?
- ARS vs. IMC
- Oppenheimer (2009)
- IMC Instructional Manipulation Check
- Single paragraph / item
- Eliminates 20-40 of Ps
- Enhances power
- Paragraph manipulations
- Sports ticket
- Can of pop
114Sports Participation
Most modern theories of decision making recognize
the fact that decisions do not take place in a
vacuum. Individual preferences and knowledge,
along with situational variables can greatly
impact the decision process. In order to
facilitate our research on decision making we are
interested in knowing certain factors about you,
the decision maker. Specifically, we are
interested in whether you actually take the time
to read the directions if not, then some of our
manipulations that rely on changes in the
instructions will be ineffective. So, in order to
demonstrate that you have read the instructions,
please ignore the sports items below, as well as
the continue button. Instead, simply click on
the title at the top of this screen (i.e.,
Sports Participation) to proceed to the next
screen. Thank you very much.
Which of these activities do you engage in
regularly? (click all that apply)
skiing
soccer
snowboarding
running
hockey
football
swimming
basketball
tennis
cycling
Continue
115Sports Participation
Most modern theories of decision making recognize
the fact that decisions do not take place in a
vacuum. Individual preferences and knowledge,
along with situational variables can greatly
impact the decision process. In order to
facilitate our research on decision making we are
interested in knowing certain factors about you,
the decision maker. Specifically, we are
interested in whether you actually take the time
to read the directions if not, then some of our
manipulations that rely on changes in the
instructions will be ineffective. So, in order to
demonstrate that you have read the instructions,
please ignore the sports items below, as well as
the continue button. Instead, simply click on
the title at the top of this screen (i.e.,
Sports Participation) to proceed to the next
screen. Thank you very much.
Which of these activities do you engage in
regularly? (click all that apply)
skiing
soccer
snowboarding
running
hockey
football
swimming
basketball
tennis
cycling
Continue
116Study 16 - Sample
- 652 online respondents
- 60 Mturk.com
- 40 UG psychology students
- Demographics
- 28yo (11.5yrs)
- 70 Female
- 74 Caucasian
- 27 High School
- 30 30k / year
117ARS IMC Agreement
Kappa .16 Kappa .16 IMC IMC Total
Kappa .16 Kappa .16 OK Exclude Total
ARS OK 435 138 91
ARS Exclude 24 30 9
Total Total 73 27 627
118Inattention Indices
119Sunk Cost Task (Thaler, 1985)
- Imagine that your favorite football team is
playing an important game that you - have paid handsomely for.
- have received from a friend.
- However, on the day of the game, it happens to
be freezing cold. What do you do?
ns
120Soda Pricing Task (Thaler, 1985)
- You are on the beach on a hot day. For the last
hour you have been thinking about how much you
would enjoy an ice cold can of soda. Your
companion needs to make a phone call and offers
to bring back a soda from the only nearby place
where drinks are sold, which happens to be a - run-down grocery store.
fancy resort. - Your companion asks how much you are willing to
pay for the soda and will only buy it if it is
below the price you state. How much are you
willing to pay?
ns
ns
121Inattention Summary
- Inattention
- Skipping instructions
- As high as 20-40
- Skimming items
- 5-10
- ARS effectively screens
- Enhances power
122Summary
- RELATIONSHIP QUALITY
- T1 IRT Optimization
- Study 1
- T2 Responsiveness to Change
- Studies 2-5
- T3 Bi-Dimensional View
- Studies 6-7
- T4 Implicit Measures
- Studies 8-10
- ATTENTION
- T5 Screening for Error Variance
- Studies 11-15
123Limitations
- Online samples
- Largely female
- Largely Caucasian
- Lacking behavioral criteria
124Thank You.
125Existing Measures
Measure Citations Cit./Year
DAS (32) 2,237 77.1
MAT (16) 1,476 32.1
QMI (6) 218 9.9
KMS (3) 179 9.4
RAS (7) 150 8.8
126Criterion Validity
- DAS Distress groups
- Current gold-standard
- DAS score lt 97.5
- 1027 DAS distressed Ps
- ROCs to identify CSI cut scores
- Identified CSI distressed Ps
- 91 agreement w/ DAS
127Precision CSI-16 vs. MAT
128Power CSI-16 vs. MAT
129Studies 2-4 Demographics
- SAMPLE
- N 2,056 initial respondents
- N 968 (47) respondents with longitudinal data
- AGE
- M 27.7yo (9.3yrs)
- GENDER
- 71 Female
- 29 Male
- RACE
- 83 Caucasian
- 5 Asian
- 4 African American
- 4 Latino
- SES
- 10 High school diploma or less
130Studies 2-4 Relationships
- Relationship Types
- 37 Married 7.9 yrs (7.9 yrs)
- 13 Engaged 3.2 yrs (2.4 yrs)
- 50 Dating 1.8 yrs (1.9 yrs)
- Relationship Satisfaction (MAT)
- Married 108 (32)
- Engaged 122 (24)
- Dating 116 (24)
- Dissatisfied Respondents
- 24 (n 487)
131Study 2 - Sample
- N596 initial respondents
- 27yo (SD 10yrs)
- 77 Female
- 84 Caucasian
- 8 High school
- 22K income
- 30 married, 14 engaged, 55 dating
- 16 dissatisfied
- 372 provided email (62)
- 267 completed follow ups (71)
- NS differences on
- Length of relationship Relationship satisfaction
- Age Education
- Gender
132Study 3 - Sample
- N398 initial respondents
- 26yo (SD 8yrs)
- 86 Female
- 80 Caucasian
- 9 High school
- 20K income
- 30 married, 12 engaged, 58 dating
- 24 dissatisfied
- 252 provided email (63)
- 156 completed follow ups (62)
- NS differences on
- Length of relationship Relationship satisfaction
- Gender Ethnicity
133Study 4 - Sample
- N1062 initial respondents
- 29yo (SD 9yrs)
- 79 Female
- 83 Caucasian
- 11 High school
- 29K income
- 44 married, 13 engaged, 43 dating
- 28 dissatisfied
- 746 provided email (70)
- 545 completed follow ups (73)
- NS differences on
- Length of relationship
- Age Ethnicity
134RCI and MDC95 Equations
- RCI
- SERM v2SD2(1 rxx)
- SERM v2MSE
- RCI (x2 x1) / SERM
- If RCI gt 1.96
- ? Sig individual change
- MDC95
- Solve RCI eq for (x2 x1)
- MDC95 1.96SERM
135Estimating Noise Reliable Individual Change
Guyatt, Walter Norman (1987) Jacobson Truax
(1991)
NOISE
SEM(Standard Error of Repeated Measurement)
2MSE(MSE Mean Squared Error from a Repeated
Measures ANOVA on the T0, F1, F2 scores of No
Change individuals)
Dx
Signal
RELIABLE CHANGE
1.98
Noise
SEM
Dx Minimal Detectable Change (MDC95)(smallest
change in scores needed in an individual to
suggest reliable change)
136Reliable Individual Change
Range SERM MCD95 SD units
CSI-32 0-161 8.0 15.7 .49 SDs
DAS 0-151 5.8 11.4 .65 SDs
CSI-16 0-81 4.8 9.4 .55 SDs
MAT 0-158 10.7 21.0 .76 SDs
CSI-4 0-21 1.6 2.8 .70 SDs
137Estimating Powerfor Detecting Perceived Change
Guyatt, Walter Norman (1987)
Sensitivity to Perceived Change (difference in
avg change scores between adjacent perceived
change groups)
Signal
POWER (Effect size)
Noise
SEM(Standard Error ofRepeated Measurement)
138Sensitivity to Perceived ChangeCSI-16 vs. MAT
139Responsiveness Model
- Level 1 repeated assessments
- X2 X1 p0 p1(global change)
- p2(deterioration) e
- Level 2 individuals
- p0 b00
- p1 b10 b11(T0 rel sat) b12(male) r1
- p2 b20 b21(T0 rel sat)
140Differences by Gender
- Scales showed slightly smaller effect sizes in men
141Study 5
- Responsiveness to Mild Intervention
- Reissman, Aron, Bergen (1993)
- Pos. activities over 10wks
- Fun/Exciting ? Enhanced satisfaction
- 158 randomly assigned to
- Control
- Fun / Exciting Activities Feedback
- 2wk follow up
- 25 Fun / Exciting behaviors
- Satisfaction
- Scales
- CSI-32 DAS-32 MAT-15 QMI
- SMD RAS KMS PN-RQ
142Fun/Exciting Activities Feedback
- Background
- There is a large body of research supporting the
importance of fun in relationships. - Unfortunately, many couples slowly forget to
make time to do fun things together the longer
they are together. - Request
- As part of this study, we would like you and
your partner to make an effort to have more fun
with each other over the next 2 weeks. - Specifically, we would like you to try to do
some fun activities that get you out of the house
and/or out of your normal routines. - These activities should be fun and exciting for
both of you. - These activities should also involve things that
you can do together (like going to dinner) rather
than more solitary activities (like reading).
143Fun/Exciting Activities Feedback
- Based on your responses, here is a list of
activities you rated as most fun and exciting
Fun activity How fun/exciting you rated it How often you currently do it
Engaging in intimate sexual activity Extremely 7x in 2 weeks
Going to a movie Extremely 1x in 2 weeks
Playing sports Extremely 2x in 2 weeks
Going camping Very 0x in 2 weeks
Spending time with friends Very 6x in 2 weeks
Going on a hike Very 3x in 2 weeks
Going on a picnic Very 0x in 2 weeks
Attending community events (e.g., festivals) Very 0x in 2 weeks
Going to the beach or lake Very 1x in 2 weeks
Going to a restaurant Somewhat 4x in 2 weeks
144Study 5 - Sample
- 158 initial respondents (first 3 ½ days of
recruitment) - 30yo (SD 11yrs)
- 74 Female
- 83 Caucasian
- 18 High school
- 53K income
- 39 married, 10 engaged, 51 dating
- 18 dissatisfied
- xxx completed follow ups (73)
- NS differences on
- Length of relationship
- Age Ethnicity
145PREPPrevention and Relationship Enhancement
Program
- 14 hour workshop over 4 sessions
- One weekend day
- Three weeknights
- Communication Skill Focus
- Speaker-Listener Technique
- Problem-Solving skills
- Time Outs
- Building Positive Behaviors
- Goals
- prevent conflict escalation (improve resolution)
- enhance/protect positive aspects of relationship
146CARECompassionate and Accepting Relationships
through Empathy
- 14 hour workshop over 4 sessions
- One weekend day
- Three weeknights
- 3 Acceptance based skill modules
- Support skills
- Conflict skills
- Forgiveness skills
- Goal increase understanding/acceptance
- To buffer rough spots
- To smooth out conflict discussions
- To protect positives
147Awareness Condition
- Movie Treatment
- List of relationship-focused movies
- Watched 5 movies together
- 40 min guided discussion after each
- First movie in a group setting (at UCLA)
- Yoked Control Group
- Equivalent time together
- Equivalent time discussing relationship
- No active psycho-educational component
148Treatment Conditions
CARE PREP Aware No Tx
N assigned 53 45 45 52
Initial satisfaction 121 117 125 117
Tx Dropout 9 10 21 --
149Hypotheses
- All treatment conditions would show better
marital quality than no tx - CARE and PREP would show better marital quality
than the minimal tx - CARE would demonstrate comparable tx effects to
PREP
150Longitudinal Assessments
- T0 1-2 months prior to workshop
- T1 start of workshop
- T2 6 months after workshop
- T3 1 year
- T4 2 years
- T5 3 years
151Previous Work
- Me/Not-Me task
- Implicit Closeness ? 3mo shift in SR closeness
- Aron, Aron, Tudor, Nelson (1991), Aron
Fraley (1999), Slotter Gardner (2009) - Rxn Time on Evaluations
- High Accessibility ? Stronger effects among SR
scales - Fincham, Garnier, Gano-Phillips, Osborne
(1995) - Partner-focused IAT
- Pos Implicit Atttitude ? Secure attachment (
lower attch avoidance) - Zayas Shoda (2005)
- Pos Implicit Attitude ? Criterion validity
(separating groups) - Banse Kowalick (2007)
- Pos Implicit Attitude ? Current relationship
satisfaction - Scinta Gable (2007)
- Self-focused IAT
- Implicit Relational Worthiness ? lower attachment
anxiety preoccupation - Implicit Relational Anxiety ? preoccupied
attachment
152Composite Codes
- Support Behavior/Affect
- Emotional Support
- Understanding Reassuring
- Responsive Relieving blame
- Negative Behavior
- Frustration Hostility
- Disagreeing Blaming
- Tension
- Conflict Behavior/Affect
- Empathic Listening
- Tuned into Ps feelings Supportive
- Validating Interested / Curious
- Affection
- Warm / Affectionate Humorous / Playful
- Negative Behavior
153Study 10 Analytic Strategy
- Actor-Partner modeling in HLM
LEVEL 1 Relationship Behavior p1(male
X own satisfaction) p2(male X spouses
satisfaction) p3(female X own
satisfaction) p4(female X spouses
satisfaction) similar sets of APIM terms
for hostile conflict neuroticism
p13(male X own partner-good) p14(male X
spouses partner-good) p15(female X own
partner-good) p16(female X spouses
partner-good) p17(male X own partner-bad)
p18(male X spouses partner-bad)
p19(female X own partner-bad) p20(female X
spouses partner-bad) APIM terms for
interactions between partner-good and partner
bad e
Self-Report Controls
Partner-GNAT Performance
LEVEL 2 p1 b10 p2 b20 p3
b30 b31(rel length) b32( of kids) r3
p4 b40 (similar equations for remaining
lvl2 effects)
154POS-RQ Distinct Change Groups
155NEG-RQ Distinct Change Groups
156POS-RQ Distinct Change Groups