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Method effects due to social desirability as a parsimonious explanation of the deviation from unidimensionality in LOT-R scores
Authors:Wolfgang A Rauch  Karl Schweizer  Helfried Moosbrugger
Institution:aInstitute of Psychology, Department of Research Methods and Evaluation, Johann Wolfgang Goethe University, Mertonstraße 17, 60054 Frankfurt am Main, Germany
Abstract:Dispositional optimism measured by the Life Orientation Test (Revised; LOT-R, Scheier et al., 1994) was originally proposed as a unidimensional construct pertaining to individual differences in positive outcome expectancies. However, factor analytic research has suggested two separate “optimism” and “pessimism” factors associated with positively and negatively worded items respectively. Using confirmatory factor analysis with data from N = 658 students it is shown that a general optimism model with method effects of the positively worded items fits even better than the “optimism–pessimism” model in terms of the AIC statistic, which accounts for both model parsimony and model fit. Furthermore, an attempt is made to explain the method effects by social desirability: impression management, one of two components of socially desirable responding, correlates significantly with the method factor whereas the other component, self-deceptive enhancement, is related to the general optimism factor. Thus it is shown that the deviation from unidimensionality of observed scores does not imply deviation from unidimensionality of optimism when method effects are incorporated in the model.
Keywords:Optimism  Pessimism  Socially desirable responding  Method effects
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