Brief emotional eating scale: A multinational study of factor structure, validity, and invariance
Food craving
Psychometrics
Emotions
150
factor analysis
233
ravitsemuspsykologia
ravitsemuskäyttäytyminen
Brief measure; Cross-cultural; Factor analysis; Food craving; Reliability; Self-report
cross-cultural
tunteet
tunnesyöminen
Surveys and Questionnaires
Liikuntapsykologia
food craving
Sport and Exercise Psychology
ta515
Craving
reliability
Reproducibility of Results
Cross-cultural
ta3142
self-report
Reliability
brief measure
Brief measure
kulttuurienvälinen tutkimus
validiteetti
mittarit (mittaus)
Self Report
Factor analysis
syömishäiriöt
Factor Analysis, Statistical
Self-report
DOI:
10.1016/j.appet.2023.106538
Publication Date:
2023-03-14T01:47:39Z
AUTHORS (9)
ABSTRACT
Emotional eating or the tendency to eat in response to emotional states can be assessed using self-report measures. The Emotional Eating Scale-II is a commonly used and reliable instrument that measures the desire to eat in response to a range of unpleasant and pleasant emotions. The current study aimed to corroborate the validity of the EES-II and expand its utility by investigating its dimensionality and testing its measurement invariance in samples from English-speaking and non-English-speaking countries. Convergent and predictive validity in respect of food craving, eating, and health indicators were also examined. This cross-national study included a total of 2485 adult participants recruited from Finland, North America, Philippines, United Kingdom, China, Italy, Spain, and South Korea, who completed the EES-II in six different languages. Factor analyses supported a four-factor structure including valence (pleasant, unpleasant) and activation (high, low) for a 12-item English version and slightly modified non-English adaptations. The model exhibited good fit in all samples, and convergent validity was demonstrated. Full invariance of factor loadings and partial invariance of factor loading, intercepts, and error variances was established across samples. Structural equation models revealed that high activation (pleasant and unpleasant) states predicted food cravings and reported eating. Overall findings across multiple samples and countries supported the factorial structure, reliability, invariance, and validity of the resulting Brief Emotional Eating Scale (BEES).
SUPPLEMENTAL MATERIAL
Coming soon ....
REFERENCES (51)
CITATIONS (2)
EXTERNAL LINKS
PlumX Metrics
RECOMMENDATIONS
FAIR ASSESSMENT
Coming soon ....
JUPYTER LAB
Coming soon ....