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Invariance in the MMPI's Component Structure
17
Citations
12
References
1987
Year
Profile ElevationPersonality PsychologyComponent StructureRepresentation TheoryPsychiatryGeometric QuantizationPsychologyFactor InvarianceSocial SciencesPrincipal Component StructureApplied Social PsychologyPsychometricsMental HealthRandom MatrixMatrix TheoryMedicinePsychological EvaluationPsychopathology
Bernstein and Garbin (1985b) suggested that the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory's major clinical scales (excluding Scales ? and 5) can be approximated by an oblique three-component structure: (a) Profile Elevation, (b) Test-taking Attitudes, and (c) Optimism-Pessimism, collectively termed the salient weight model. In this study, we found that both this model and the MMPI's principal component structure remain invariant across race, sex, and, as previously noted, context of testing (job applicants vs. inmates in correctional institutions). We further noted that several alternative definitions of Profile Elevation provide equally satisfactory representation of the relations among the scales. This factor invariance is necessary, but not sufficient, for the MMPI to be viewed as unbiased.
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