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Testing the measurement equivalence of personality adjective items across cultures
Authors:Christopher D. Nye  Brent W. Roberts  Gerard Saucier  Xinyue Zhou
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 603 East Daniel Street, Champaign, IL 61820, USA;2. Department of Psychology, University of Oregon, 1227, Eugene, OR 97403, USA;3. Department of Psychology, Sun Yat Sen University, Guangzhou 510275, China
Abstract:Although previous research has examined cross-cultural differences in personality, many of these studies neglected to first establish that the measures being used were equivalent in meaning across cultures. Using samples of Chinese, Greek, and American respondents, the measurement equivalence of the Big Five Mini-Markers [Saucier, G. (1994). Mini-markers: A brief version of Goldberg’s unipolar Big-Five markers. Journal of Personality assessment, 63, 506–516] was assessed using confirmatory factor analysis. The results indicate that all of the scales demonstrate configural invariance, but fail to show metric or scalar invariance. Several adjectives from these scales were found to exhibit bias at the item-level. The practical implications of these results are discussed and future research is suggested.
Keywords:Measurement equivalence   Cross-cultural personality
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