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Short Form of the Sense of Coherence Scale (SOC-L9) in the US, Germany, and Russia
17
Citations
31
References
2019
Year
Measurement TheoryMeasurementGeneralizability TheoryItem Response TheoryEducationPsychometricsMental HealthClassical Test TheoryUnited StatesShort FormPsychologyApplied MeasurementFactor AnalysisInterobserver AgreementPsychological EvaluationStructural Equation ModelingReliabilityCognitive SciencePsychiatryTest DevelopmentValidity TheoryCoherence ScaleCross-cultural AssessmentConfirmatory ResearchCross-national Measurement InvarianceMedicinePsychological Measurement
Abstract. Validation of a 9-item version of the Sense of Coherence Scale (SOC-L9) and testing its cross-national measurement invariance and latent mean differences in representative samples from the United States of America (US), Germany, and Russia. The psychometric properties of the SOC-L9 were tested with representative samples aged 18–100 years from the US ( N = 2,972), Germany ( N = 2,005), and Russia ( N = 2,726). Both a model with a general factor and method effect of items with negative wording and a unidimensional model were tested for structure validity. Measurement equivalence and latent mean comparisons were conducted across the samples. The SOC-L9 showed good reliability and validity in all countries. Rather than the unidimensional model, the model with additional method effect showed excellent fit across countries. Cross-national measurement invariance testing found partial strong measurement invariance across the three samples. The latent means of the SOC-L9 in the US sample were higher than those in German and Russian samples. The SOC-L9 has proved to be economic, valid, reliable, and cross-nationally applicable in the US, Germany, and Russia. Meaningful differences across countries were found, suggesting the importance of taking cultural background into account in SOC-related research.
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