학술논문

Making the Myths of Dating Violence Visible: Developing a New Scale and Testing Its Psychometrics Through Cross-Sectional and Longitudinal Evidence.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Interpersonal Violence. Jul2023, Vol. 38 Issue 13/14, p8136-8161. 26p.
Subject
*EXPERIMENTAL design
*COLLEGE students
*RESEARCH methodology
*RESEARCH methodology evaluation
*CROSS-sectional method
*DATING violence
*BEHAVIOR
*PSYCHOMETRICS
*CRONBACH'S alpha
*PSYCHOLOGICAL safety
*DESCRIPTIVE statistics
*FACTOR analysis
*DATA analysis software
*PREDICTIVE validity
*LONGITUDINAL method
Language
ISSN
0886-2605
Abstract
Myths refer to misperceptions, overgeneralizations, or ideas that most people believe in but do not necessarily reflect the truth. To date, research on the myths surrounding dating violence (DV) has not received much attention, most probably due to the lack of a validated measure. Thus, we developed a standardized measure to gauge DV myths and test its psychometrics. The instrument's design is based on three studies utilizing cross-sectional and longitudinal sets of data. In Study 1, in a sample of 259 emerging adults, predominantly college students, the explanatory factor analysis revealed a solid three-factor structure. In Study 2, in a separate sample of 330 emerging adults, primarily college students, we cross-validated the factor structure via confirmatory factor analysis. We also provided evidence for concurrent validity. In Study 3, we revealed that our newly developed scale had predictive validity among dating and non-dating emerging adults, mostly college students, via longitudinal data. Based on the findings from three studies, we can buoyantly announce that the Dating Violence Myths scale is a promising novel and standardized tool for measuring beliefs about DV. The cross-sectional and longitudinal evidence alludes to a need for DV myths to be debunked to reduce psychological DV attitudes, perceptions, and behaviors among emerging adults. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]