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Journal Article

Citation

Gucciardi DF, Zhang CQ, Ponnusamy V, Si G, Stenling A. J. Sport Exerc. Psychol. 2016; 38(2): 187-202.

Affiliation

School of Physiotherapy and Exercise Science, Curtin University, Perth, WA, Australia.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2016, Human Kinetics Publishers)

DOI

10.1123/jsep.2015-0320

PMID

27390084

Abstract

The aims of this study were to assess the cross-cultural invariance of athletes' self-reports of mental toughness, and introduce and illustrate the application of approximate measurement invariance using Bayesian estimation for sport and exercise psychology scholars. Athletes from Australia (n = 353, Mage = 19.13, SD = 3.27, males = 161), China (n = 254, Mage = 17.82, SD = 2.28, males = 138), and Malaysia (n = 341, Mage = 19.13, SD = 3.27, males = 200) provided a cross-sectional snapshot of their mental toughness. The cross-cultural invariance of the mental toughness inventory in terms of (i) the factor structure (configural invariance), (ii) factor loadings (metric invariance), and (iii) item intercepts (scalar invariance) was tested using an approximate measurement framework with Bayesian estimation.

RESULTS indicated that approximate metric and scalar invariance was established. From a methodological standpoint, this study demonstrated the usefulness and flexibility of Bayesian estimation for single-sample and multi-group analyses of measurement instruments. Substantively, the current findings suggest that the measurement of mental toughness requires cultural adjustments to better capture the contextually-salient (emic) aspects of this concept.


Language: en

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