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Quantifying the Strength of General Factors in Psychopathology: A Comparison of CFA with Maximum Likelihood Estimation,BSEM, and ESEM/EFA Bifactor Approaches
Authors:Aja Louise Murray  Tom Booth  Manuel Eisner  Ingrid Obsuth  Denis Ribeaud
Affiliation:1. Violence Research Centre, Institute of Criminology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK;2. Department of Psychology, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK;3. Jacobs Center for Productive Youth Development, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
Abstract:Whether or not importance should be placed on an all-encompassing general factor of psychopathology (or p factor) in classifying, researching, diagnosing, and treating psychiatric disorders depends (among other issues) on the extent to which comorbidity is symptom-general rather than staying largely within the confines of narrower transdiagnostic factors such as internalizing and externalizing. In this study, we compared three methods of estimating p factor strength. We compared omega hierarchical and explained common variance calculated from confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) bifactor models with maximum likelihood (ML) estimation, from exploratory structural equation modeling/exploratory factor analysis models with a bifactor rotation, and from Bayesian structural equation modeling (BSEM) bifactor models. Our simulation results suggested that BSEM with small variance priors on secondary loadings might be the preferred option. However, CFA with ML also performed well provided secondary loadings were modeled. We provide two empirical examples of applying the three methodologies using a normative sample of youth (z-proso, n = 1,286) and a university counseling sample (n = 359).
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