4.3 Article

The Value of Suppressor Effects in Explicating the Construct Validity of Symptom Measures

Journal

PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT
Volume 25, Issue 3, Pages 929-941

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/a0032781

Keywords

construct validity; suppressor effects; hierarchical models; appetite disturbance; mania symptoms

Funding

  1. NIMH NIH HHS [R01 MH068472, R01-MH068472] Funding Source: Medline

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Suppressor effects are operating when the addition of a predictor increases the predictive power of another variable. We argue that suppressor effects can play a valuable role in explicating the construct validity of symptom measures by bringing into clearer focus opposing elements that are inherent but largely hidden in the measure's overall score. We illustrate this point using theoretically grounded, replicated suppressor effects that have emerged in analyses of the original Inventory of Depression and Anxiety Symptoms (IDAS; Watson et al., 2007) and its expanded 2nd version (IDAS-II; Watson et al., 2012). In Study 1, we demonstrate that the IDAS-II Appetite Gain and Appetite Loss scales contain both (a) a shared distress component that creates a positive correlation between them and (b) a specific symptom component that produces a natural negative association between them (i.e., people who recently have experienced decreased interest in food/loss of appetite are less likely to report a concomitant increase in appetite/weight). In Study 2, we establish that mania scales also contain 2 distinct elements namely, high energy/positive emotionality and general distress/dysfunction-that oppose each another in many instances. In both studies, we obtained evidence of suppression effects that were highly robust across different types of respondents (e.g., clinical outpatients, community adults, college students) and using both self-report and interview-based measures. These replicable suppressor effects establish that many homogeneous, unidimensional symptom scales actually contain distinguishable components with distinct-at times, even antagonistic-properties.

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