Construct validity evidence reporting practices for the Reading the Mind in the Eyes Test: A systematic scoping review

IF 13.7 1区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL Clinical Psychology Review Pub Date : 2023-12-28 DOI:10.1016/j.cpr.2023.102378
Wendy C. Higgins , David M. Kaplan , Eliane Deschrijver , Robert M. Ross
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Abstract

The Reading the Mind in the Eyes Test (RMET) is one of the most influential measures of social cognitive ability, and it has been used extensively in clinical populations. However, questions have been raised about the validity of RMET scores. We conducted a systematic scoping review of the validity evidence reported in studies that administered the RMET (n = 1461; of which 804 included at least one clinical sample) with a focus on six key dimensions: internal consistency, test-retest reliability, factor structure, convergent validity, discriminant validity, and known group validity. Strikingly, 63% of these studies failed to provide validity evidence from any of these six categories. Moreover, when evidence was reported, it frequently failed to meet widely accepted validity standards. Overall, our results suggest a troubling conclusion: the validity of RMET scores (and the research findings based on them) are largely unsubstantiated and uninterpretable. More broadly, this project demonstrates how unaddressed measurement issues can undermine a voluminous psychological literature.

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读心术测试的结构效度证据报告实践:系统性范围审查
读心测试(RMET)是最具影响力的社会认知能力测量方法之一,已被广泛应用于临床人群。然而,人们对 RMET 分数的有效性提出了质疑。我们对实施 RMET 的研究(n = 1461;其中 804 项研究至少包含一个临床样本)中报告的有效性证据进行了系统性的范围界定审查,重点关注六个关键维度:内部一致性、测试-再测可靠性、因子结构、收敛有效性、判别有效性和已知群体有效性。令人吃惊的是,这些研究中有 63% 未能提供这六个方面中任何一个方面的有效性证据。此外,即使报告了证据,也往往不符合广泛接受的效度标准。总之,我们的研究结果表明了一个令人担忧的结论:RMET 分数(以及基于 RMET 分数的研究结果)的有效性在很大程度上是未经证实和无法解释的。从更广泛的意义上讲,这个项目展示了未解决的测量问题是如何破坏大量心理学文献的。
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来源期刊
Clinical Psychology Review
Clinical Psychology Review PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL-
CiteScore
23.10
自引率
1.60%
发文量
65
期刊介绍: Clinical Psychology Review serves as a platform for substantial reviews addressing pertinent topics in clinical psychology. Encompassing a spectrum of issues, from psychopathology to behavior therapy, cognition to cognitive therapies, behavioral medicine to community mental health, assessment, and child development, the journal seeks cutting-edge papers that significantly contribute to advancing the science and/or practice of clinical psychology. While maintaining a primary focus on topics directly related to clinical psychology, the journal occasionally features reviews on psychophysiology, learning therapy, experimental psychopathology, and social psychology, provided they demonstrate a clear connection to research or practice in clinical psychology. Integrative literature reviews and summaries of innovative ongoing clinical research programs find a place within its pages. However, reports on individual research studies and theoretical treatises or clinical guides lacking an empirical base are deemed inappropriate for publication.
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