Assessing Emotional Reactivity: Psychometric Properties of the Perth Emotional Reactivity Scale and the Development of a Short Form

Adult Male Psychiatric Status Rating Scales Psychometrics [RSTDPub] 150 401 Reproducibility of Results reinforcement sensitivity Models, Psychological 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Reward Surveys and Questionnaires Adaptation, Psychological Psychology Humans Female Self Report Factor Analysis, Statistical Personality Aged
DOI: 10.1080/00223891.2018.1465430 Publication Date: 2018-05-16T05:37:32Z
ABSTRACT
The Perth Emotional Reactivity Scale (PERS) is a 30-item self-report measure of trait levels of emotional reactivity. In this article, we examine the psychometric properties of the PERS subscale and composite scores in an adult community sample (N = 428), and develop an 18-item short form of the measure (PERS-S). The PERS and PERS-S are designed to assess the typical ease of activation, intensity, and duration of one's emotional responses, and do so for positive and negative emotions separately. Our confirmatory factor analyses supported that the PERS and PERS-S both had the same theoretically congruent factor structure, and that all subscale and composite scores displayed high internal consistency reliability. Correlations with scores from established measures of psychopathology and emotion regulation also supported the validity of PERS and PERS-S scores. Our data therefore suggest that the PERS-S subscale and composite scores retain the psychometric strengths of their longer PERS counterparts. We conclude that both forms of the measure have good utility. Clinical and research applications are discussed.
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