The Inventory of Personality OrganizationReality Testing Subscale and Belief in Science Scale: Confirmatory factor and Rasch analysis of thinking style measures
Abstract
. The Inventory of Personality Organization-Reality Testing Subscale (IPO-RT) and Belief in
Science Scale (BIS) represent indirect, proxy measures of intuitive-experiential and analytical-rational thinking. However, a limited appraisal of factorial structure exists, and assessment of person-item functioning has not occurred. This study assessed the IPO-RT and BIS
using confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) and Rasch analysis with a sample of 1030 participants (465 males, 565 females). Correlation analysis revealed a negative, moderate relationship between the measures. CFA supported a bifactorial model of the IPO-RT with four
bifactors (Auditory and Visual Hallucinations, Delusional Thinking, Social Deficits, and Confusion). A one-factor model best fitted the BIS. Satisfactory item/person reliability and unidimensionality was observed for both measures using Rasch analysis, and items generally
exhibited gender invariance. However, IPO-RT items were challenging, whereas BIS items
were relatively easy to endorse. Overall, results indicated that the IPO-RT and BIS are conceptually sound, indirect indices of intuitive-experiential and analytical-rational thinking.
Acknowledging the breadth of these thinking styles, a useful future research focus includes
evaluating the performance of IPO-RT and BIS alongside objective tests.
The Inventory of Personality OrganizationReality Testing Subscale and Belief in Science Scale: Confirmatory factor and Rasch analysis of thinking style measures
Tipo de Actividad
Artículos en revistasISSN
1932-6203Palabras Clave
.Reality Testing Belief in Science Factor Analysis Intuitive-Experiential Thinking Analytical-Rational Thinking.