dc.description.abstract | Background: The current study is an examination of the psychometric properties of the Norwegian
Social Responsiveness Scale (SRS), a measure of deficits in social behavior, in a neuropediatric
outpatient sample of children and adolescents with neurological and neurodevelopmental
disorders.<p>
<p>Method: The internal consistency of the SRS, the convergent validity of the SRS with the Vineland
Adaptive Behavior Scale-II (VABS-II), the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ), and the
Aberrant Behavior Checklist (ABC) were examined, in addition to four different factor models of
the SRS (i.e., a one-factor, the original five-factor, a second-order five-factor model, and a 16-item
one-factor model) using confirmatory factor analyses.
<p>Results: There was satisfactory internal consistency on all subscales, except for the Social
Awareness subscale. The SRS showed a somewhat meaningful overlap with parts of the related
scales on the VABS-II, the SDQ, and the ABC. Model fit indices were mixed for evaluating the four
different factor models. Overall, however, the model fit was rather poor.
<p>Conclusions: The original SRS subscales showed adequate internal consistency and satisfactory
convergent validity on some of the subscales. The construct validity in terms of factor structure
was not acceptable. Future research should examine the psychometric properties of an improved
version of the SRS, especially in terms of improving the scale’s construct validity. | en_US |