Attending to the Attentional Control Scale for Children: Confirming its factor structure and measurement invariance |
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Affiliation: | 1. Child Study Center, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT 06510, USA;2. Anxiety and Mood Disorders Program, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT 06510, USA;3. Department of Neuroscience, Carleton University, Ottawa, Ontario K1S 5B6, Canada;4. Department of Neuroscience, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT 06510, USA;5. Program in Neurodevelopment and Regeneration, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06510, USA;6. Department of Psychology, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06520, USA |
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Abstract: | The Attentional Control Scale for Children (ACS-C) is a widely used self-report questionnaire that measures attentional control in youth. Previous research examined factor-structure and validation of the ACS-C and yielded a 2-factor structure with Attentional Focusing and Attentional Shifting subscales. This study used a confirmatory factor analysis in a large, ethnically diverse sample of clinic-referred anxious youth (N = 442, ages 7–16 years) to compare model fit of three models, the original two-factor model of the ACS-C, a two-factor model of a modified ACS-C (two items re-assigned from Attentional Focusing to Attentional Shifting, three items removed from Attentional Focusing, and two items removed from Attentional Shifting), and a single-factor model. Results reveal best model fit for the two-factor modified ACS-C. This model had strong factorial invariance across sex, partial invariance across ethnicity, and was variant across age. Also, total and subscale scores for the two-factor modified ACS-C correlated with anxiety and depression symptom scale scores, supporting its concurrent validity. Findings confirm the two-factor structure of the modified ACS-C. Future research implications relating to attentional control in children are discussed. |
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Keywords: | Attentional control Anxious youth Confirmatory factor analysis |
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