General Inattentiveness Is a Long-Term Reliable Trait Independently Predictive of Psychological Health: Danish Validation Studies of the Mindful Attention Awareness Scale

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

General Inattentiveness Is a Long-Term Reliable Trait Independently Predictive of Psychological Health : Danish Validation Studies of the Mindful Attention Awareness Scale. / Jensen, Christian Gaden; Niclasen, Janni; Vangkilde, Signe; Petersen, Anders; Hasselbalch, Steen.

I: Psychological Assessment, Bind 28, Nr. 5, 01.2016, s. 70-87.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Jensen, CG, Niclasen, J, Vangkilde, S, Petersen, A & Hasselbalch, S 2016, 'General Inattentiveness Is a Long-Term Reliable Trait Independently Predictive of Psychological Health: Danish Validation Studies of the Mindful Attention Awareness Scale', Psychological Assessment, bind 28, nr. 5, s. 70-87. https://doi.org/10.1037/pas0000196

APA

Jensen, C. G., Niclasen, J., Vangkilde, S., Petersen, A., & Hasselbalch, S. (2016). General Inattentiveness Is a Long-Term Reliable Trait Independently Predictive of Psychological Health: Danish Validation Studies of the Mindful Attention Awareness Scale. Psychological Assessment, 28(5), 70-87. https://doi.org/10.1037/pas0000196

Vancouver

Jensen CG, Niclasen J, Vangkilde S, Petersen A, Hasselbalch S. General Inattentiveness Is a Long-Term Reliable Trait Independently Predictive of Psychological Health: Danish Validation Studies of the Mindful Attention Awareness Scale. Psychological Assessment. 2016 jan.;28(5):70-87. https://doi.org/10.1037/pas0000196

Author

Jensen, Christian Gaden ; Niclasen, Janni ; Vangkilde, Signe ; Petersen, Anders ; Hasselbalch, Steen. / General Inattentiveness Is a Long-Term Reliable Trait Independently Predictive of Psychological Health : Danish Validation Studies of the Mindful Attention Awareness Scale. I: Psychological Assessment. 2016 ; Bind 28, Nr. 5. s. 70-87.

Bibtex

@article{627cad53b1264bb8bc3a78f045486403,
title = "General Inattentiveness Is a Long-Term Reliable Trait Independently Predictive of Psychological Health: Danish Validation Studies of the Mindful Attention Awareness Scale",
abstract = "The Mindful Attention Awareness Scale (MAAS) measures perceived degree of inattentiveness in different contexts and is often used as a reversed indicator of mindfulness. MAAS is hypothesized to reflect a psychological trait or disposition when used outside attentional training contexts, but the long-term test-retest reliability of MAAS scores is virtually untested. It is unknown whether MAAS predicts psychological health after controlling for standardized socioeconomic status classifications. First, MAAS translated to Danish was validated psychometrically within a randomly invited healthy adult community sample (N = 490). Factor analysis confirmed that MAAS scores quantified a unifactorial construct of excellent composite reliability and consistent convergent validity. Structural equation modeling revealed that MAAS scores contributed independently to predicting psychological distress and mental health, after controlling for age, gender, income, socioeconomic occupational class, stressful life events, and social desirability (β = 0.32-.42, ps < .001). Second, MAAS scores showed satisfactory short-term test-retest reliability in 100 retested healthy university students. Finally, MAAS sample mean scores as well as individuals' scores demonstrated satisfactory test-retest reliability across a 6 months interval in the adult community (retested N = 407), intraclass correlations ≥ .74. MAAS scores displayed significantly stronger long-term test-retest reliability than scores measuring psychological distress (z = 2.78, p = .005). Test-retest reliability estimates did not differ within demographic and socioeconomic strata. Scores on the Danish MAAS were psychometrically validated in healthy adults. MAAS's inattentiveness scores reflected a unidimensional construct, long-term reliable disposition, and a factor of independent significance for predicting psychological health. (PsycINFO Database Record",
author = "Jensen, {Christian Gaden} and Janni Niclasen and Signe Vangkilde and Anders Petersen and Steen Hasselbalch",
year = "2016",
month = jan,
doi = "10.1037/pas0000196",
language = "Dansk",
volume = "28",
pages = "70--87",
journal = "Psychological Assessment",
issn = "1040-3590",
publisher = "American Psychological Association",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - General Inattentiveness Is a Long-Term Reliable Trait Independently Predictive of Psychological Health

T2 - Danish Validation Studies of the Mindful Attention Awareness Scale

AU - Jensen, Christian Gaden

AU - Niclasen, Janni

AU - Vangkilde, Signe

AU - Petersen, Anders

AU - Hasselbalch, Steen

PY - 2016/1

Y1 - 2016/1

N2 - The Mindful Attention Awareness Scale (MAAS) measures perceived degree of inattentiveness in different contexts and is often used as a reversed indicator of mindfulness. MAAS is hypothesized to reflect a psychological trait or disposition when used outside attentional training contexts, but the long-term test-retest reliability of MAAS scores is virtually untested. It is unknown whether MAAS predicts psychological health after controlling for standardized socioeconomic status classifications. First, MAAS translated to Danish was validated psychometrically within a randomly invited healthy adult community sample (N = 490). Factor analysis confirmed that MAAS scores quantified a unifactorial construct of excellent composite reliability and consistent convergent validity. Structural equation modeling revealed that MAAS scores contributed independently to predicting psychological distress and mental health, after controlling for age, gender, income, socioeconomic occupational class, stressful life events, and social desirability (β = 0.32-.42, ps < .001). Second, MAAS scores showed satisfactory short-term test-retest reliability in 100 retested healthy university students. Finally, MAAS sample mean scores as well as individuals' scores demonstrated satisfactory test-retest reliability across a 6 months interval in the adult community (retested N = 407), intraclass correlations ≥ .74. MAAS scores displayed significantly stronger long-term test-retest reliability than scores measuring psychological distress (z = 2.78, p = .005). Test-retest reliability estimates did not differ within demographic and socioeconomic strata. Scores on the Danish MAAS were psychometrically validated in healthy adults. MAAS's inattentiveness scores reflected a unidimensional construct, long-term reliable disposition, and a factor of independent significance for predicting psychological health. (PsycINFO Database Record

AB - The Mindful Attention Awareness Scale (MAAS) measures perceived degree of inattentiveness in different contexts and is often used as a reversed indicator of mindfulness. MAAS is hypothesized to reflect a psychological trait or disposition when used outside attentional training contexts, but the long-term test-retest reliability of MAAS scores is virtually untested. It is unknown whether MAAS predicts psychological health after controlling for standardized socioeconomic status classifications. First, MAAS translated to Danish was validated psychometrically within a randomly invited healthy adult community sample (N = 490). Factor analysis confirmed that MAAS scores quantified a unifactorial construct of excellent composite reliability and consistent convergent validity. Structural equation modeling revealed that MAAS scores contributed independently to predicting psychological distress and mental health, after controlling for age, gender, income, socioeconomic occupational class, stressful life events, and social desirability (β = 0.32-.42, ps < .001). Second, MAAS scores showed satisfactory short-term test-retest reliability in 100 retested healthy university students. Finally, MAAS sample mean scores as well as individuals' scores demonstrated satisfactory test-retest reliability across a 6 months interval in the adult community (retested N = 407), intraclass correlations ≥ .74. MAAS scores displayed significantly stronger long-term test-retest reliability than scores measuring psychological distress (z = 2.78, p = .005). Test-retest reliability estimates did not differ within demographic and socioeconomic strata. Scores on the Danish MAAS were psychometrically validated in healthy adults. MAAS's inattentiveness scores reflected a unidimensional construct, long-term reliable disposition, and a factor of independent significance for predicting psychological health. (PsycINFO Database Record

U2 - 10.1037/pas0000196

DO - 10.1037/pas0000196

M3 - Tidsskriftartikel

C2 - 26751089

VL - 28

SP - 70

EP - 87

JO - Psychological Assessment

JF - Psychological Assessment

SN - 1040-3590

IS - 5

ER -

ID: 153384953