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Use of the family adaptability and cohesion evaluation scales in child clinical research
Authors:Scott W. Henggeler  Alice W. Burr-Harris  Charles M. Borduin  Gerald McCallum
Affiliation:(1) School of Human Behavior, United States International University, 10455 Pomerodo Rd., 92131 San Diego, California;(2) University of Missouri-Columbia, 65211 Columbia, Missouri;(3) Memphis State University, 38152 Memphis, Tennessee
Abstract:Although the FACES has become a widely used instrument for assessing children's family relations, the possible linearity vs. curvilinearity of its cohesion and adaptability scales has been treated inconsistently by investigators. This study evaluated whether samples of adolescent repeat offenders, young adult prisoners, and adolescent nonoffenders were discriminated better by a linear or curvilinear treatment of the FACES scores. Between-groups comparisons showed that significant effects were observed for each of the three curvilinear measures (cohesion-curvilinear, adaptability-curvilinear, distance-from-center) and only one of the two linear measures (cohesionlinear). These findings support the superiority of a curvilinear treatment of the FACES. In light of these findings, it is suggested that investigators who use FACES evaluate the linearity of the scales and determine whether a linear or curvilinear treatment of the data produces more meaningful results.
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