The Short Version of the Metacognitive Anger Processing Scale (MAP-SV) – initial psychometric testing

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The Short Version of the Metacognitive Anger Processing Scale (MAP-SV) – initial psychometric testing. / Moeller, Stine Bjerrum; Juul, Sophie; Arendt, Ida-marie T. P.

In: Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy, Vol. 50, No. 1, 2022, p. 117-121.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Moeller, SB, Juul, S & Arendt, ITP 2022, 'The Short Version of the Metacognitive Anger Processing Scale (MAP-SV) – initial psychometric testing', Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy, vol. 50, no. 1, pp. 117-121. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1352465821000199

APA

Moeller, S. B., Juul, S., & Arendt, I. T. P. (2022). The Short Version of the Metacognitive Anger Processing Scale (MAP-SV) – initial psychometric testing. Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy, 50(1), 117-121. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1352465821000199

Vancouver

Moeller SB, Juul S, Arendt ITP. The Short Version of the Metacognitive Anger Processing Scale (MAP-SV) – initial psychometric testing. Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy. 2022;50(1):117-121. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1352465821000199

Author

Moeller, Stine Bjerrum ; Juul, Sophie ; Arendt, Ida-marie T. P. / The Short Version of the Metacognitive Anger Processing Scale (MAP-SV) – initial psychometric testing. In: Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy. 2022 ; Vol. 50, No. 1. pp. 117-121.

Bibtex

@article{3c23300f91df4f8a86c6a9da3ab3d6da,
title = "The Short Version of the Metacognitive Anger Processing Scale (MAP-SV) – initial psychometric testing",
abstract = "Background:The 26-item version of the Metacognitive Anger Processing Scale (MAP) has shown good psychometric properties in previous studies. However, there is a need for a shorter version of the scale.Aims:The aim of the present study is to psychometrically evaluate the 9-item Metacognitive Anger Processing Scale – Short Version (MAP-SV) in comparison with the original, 26-item version.Method:The 26-item MAP includes three subscales: rumination, positive beliefs and negative beliefs. Three items from each subscale were selected based on clinical validity to constitute the 9-item MAP-SV. A previous sample used for validation of the 26-item MAP was used for clinimetric testing. The sample included psychiatric patients (n = 88) and male forensic inpatients (n = 54). The MAP-SV was assessed according to scalability, convergent validity with general metacognition, and concurrent validity with anger measures.Results:The scalability of the 9-item MAP-SV was comparable to that of the original 26-item MAP in most psychometric tests. The Loevinger{\textquoteright}s coefficient of homogeneity for the total score of the MAP-SV items was 0.29 for the combined sample compared with 0.36 in the original MAP, indicating close to acceptable scalability. The alpha coefficient for the MAP-SV total score was 0.79. For the combined sample, Pearson inter-correlations between the subscales of the MAP-SV were highly correlated with the MAP-SV total score (ranging from .66 to .84).Conclusions:The 9-item MAP-SV showed good psychometric properties and can be used as a reliable tool for assessing self-reported metacognitive anger processing.",
keywords = "Faculty of Social Sciences, anger, assessment tool, metacognitive anger processing, metacognitve beliefs, rumination, short version",
author = "Moeller, {Stine Bjerrum} and Sophie Juul and Arendt, {Ida-marie T. P.}",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.1017/S1352465821000199",
language = "English",
volume = "50",
pages = "117--121",
journal = "Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy",
issn = "1352-4658",
publisher = "Cambridge University Press",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The Short Version of the Metacognitive Anger Processing Scale (MAP-SV) – initial psychometric testing

AU - Moeller, Stine Bjerrum

AU - Juul, Sophie

AU - Arendt, Ida-marie T. P.

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - Background:The 26-item version of the Metacognitive Anger Processing Scale (MAP) has shown good psychometric properties in previous studies. However, there is a need for a shorter version of the scale.Aims:The aim of the present study is to psychometrically evaluate the 9-item Metacognitive Anger Processing Scale – Short Version (MAP-SV) in comparison with the original, 26-item version.Method:The 26-item MAP includes three subscales: rumination, positive beliefs and negative beliefs. Three items from each subscale were selected based on clinical validity to constitute the 9-item MAP-SV. A previous sample used for validation of the 26-item MAP was used for clinimetric testing. The sample included psychiatric patients (n = 88) and male forensic inpatients (n = 54). The MAP-SV was assessed according to scalability, convergent validity with general metacognition, and concurrent validity with anger measures.Results:The scalability of the 9-item MAP-SV was comparable to that of the original 26-item MAP in most psychometric tests. The Loevinger’s coefficient of homogeneity for the total score of the MAP-SV items was 0.29 for the combined sample compared with 0.36 in the original MAP, indicating close to acceptable scalability. The alpha coefficient for the MAP-SV total score was 0.79. For the combined sample, Pearson inter-correlations between the subscales of the MAP-SV were highly correlated with the MAP-SV total score (ranging from .66 to .84).Conclusions:The 9-item MAP-SV showed good psychometric properties and can be used as a reliable tool for assessing self-reported metacognitive anger processing.

AB - Background:The 26-item version of the Metacognitive Anger Processing Scale (MAP) has shown good psychometric properties in previous studies. However, there is a need for a shorter version of the scale.Aims:The aim of the present study is to psychometrically evaluate the 9-item Metacognitive Anger Processing Scale – Short Version (MAP-SV) in comparison with the original, 26-item version.Method:The 26-item MAP includes three subscales: rumination, positive beliefs and negative beliefs. Three items from each subscale were selected based on clinical validity to constitute the 9-item MAP-SV. A previous sample used for validation of the 26-item MAP was used for clinimetric testing. The sample included psychiatric patients (n = 88) and male forensic inpatients (n = 54). The MAP-SV was assessed according to scalability, convergent validity with general metacognition, and concurrent validity with anger measures.Results:The scalability of the 9-item MAP-SV was comparable to that of the original 26-item MAP in most psychometric tests. The Loevinger’s coefficient of homogeneity for the total score of the MAP-SV items was 0.29 for the combined sample compared with 0.36 in the original MAP, indicating close to acceptable scalability. The alpha coefficient for the MAP-SV total score was 0.79. For the combined sample, Pearson inter-correlations between the subscales of the MAP-SV were highly correlated with the MAP-SV total score (ranging from .66 to .84).Conclusions:The 9-item MAP-SV showed good psychometric properties and can be used as a reliable tool for assessing self-reported metacognitive anger processing.

KW - Faculty of Social Sciences

KW - anger

KW - assessment tool

KW - metacognitive anger processing

KW - metacognitve beliefs

KW - rumination

KW - short version

U2 - 10.1017/S1352465821000199

DO - 10.1017/S1352465821000199

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 34078508

VL - 50

SP - 117

EP - 121

JO - Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy

JF - Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy

SN - 1352-4658

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 346455415