Publication | Open Access
The assessment of protective behavioral strategies: Comparing the absolute frequency and contingent frequency response scales.
13
Citations
0
References
2013
Year
Substance UseBehavioral OutcomeBehavioral AspectEducationPsychometricsClassical Test TheoryBehavior AnalysisPsychologyAlcohol MisuseBehavior ManagementContingent Frequency ScaleBehavior ModificationPublic HealthResponse ScaleBehavioral SciencesAlcohol AbuseAlcohol ControlAlcohol DependenceSubstance AbuseAddictionAbsolute FrequencyProtective Behavioral StrategiesContingent Frequency
The purpose of the present studies was to examine the effects of response scale on the observed relationships between protective behavioral strategies (PBS) measures and alcohol-related outcomes. We reasoned that an "absolute frequency" scale (stem: "how many times …"; response scale: 0 times to 11+ times) conflates the frequency of using PBS with the frequency of consuming alcohol; thus, we hypothesized that the use of an absolute frequency response scale would result in positive relationships between types of PBS and alcohol-related outcomes. Alternatively, a "contingent frequency" scale (stem: "When drinking … how often …"; response scale: never to always) does not conflate frequency of alcohol use with use of PBS; therefore, we hypothesized that use of a contingent frequency scale would result in negative relationships between use of PBS and alcohol-related outcomes. Two published measures of PBS were used across studies: the Protective Behavioral Strategies Survey (PBSS) and the Strategy Questionnaire (SQ). Across three studies, we demonstrate that when measured using a contingent frequency response scale, PBS measures relate negatively to alcohol-related outcomes in a theoretically consistent manner; however, when PBS measures were measured on an absolute frequency response scale, they were nonsignificantly or positively related to alcohol-related outcomes. We discuss the implications of these findings for the assessment of PBS.