4.2 Article

Developing Preliminary Scales for Assessing the HiTOP Detachment Spectrum

Journal

ASSESSMENT
Volume 29, Issue 1, Pages 75-87

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/10731911211015313

Keywords

Hierarchical Taxonomy of Psychopathology; personality; detachment; extraversion; factor analysis; ant colony optimization; scale construction

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The study aimed to develop preliminary scales for the HiTOP Detachment spectrum through factor analysis and ant colony optimization methods. Seven 8-item scales were developed to capture unipolar facets of Detachment, along with three other 8-item scales tapping into a Maladaptive Extraversion construct. The scales showed evidence of reliability and validity, while the challenges of assessing Detachment were discussed for developing a comprehensive measure of HiTOP.
The Hierarchical Taxonomy of Psychopathology (HiTOP) is an empirical-based classification of psychopathology. Detachment is one of the six spectra in the current HiTOP working model. The aim of this study was to develop preliminary scales for the HiTOP Detachment spectrum that can be used in the next phase of developing a comprehensive measure of HiTOP. We had 456 participants from MTurk (Sample 1) and 266 university students (Sample 2) complete an online survey including a pool of 247 Detachment items assessing 15 consensually defined low-order constructs. Using a stepwise procedure involving factor analyses and ant colony optimization methods, we developed seven 8-item scales that capture unipolar facets of Detachment: anhedonia, suspiciousness, social withdrawal, intimacy avoidance, unassertiveness, risk aversion, and restricted affectivity. Three other 8-item scales emerged that tapped into a Maladaptive Extraversion construct (attention-seeking, thrill-seeking, and domineering), which was mostly unrelated to unipolar Detachment in factor analyses. The 10 scales were unidimensional, reliable, and showed some evidence of convergent and discriminant validity. We discuss challenges of assessing Detachment when moving forward with developing a comprehensive measure of HiTOP.

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