Assessing Personality Features and Their Relations with Behavioral Problems Inadolescents: Tridimentional Personality Questionnaire and Junior Eysenck Personality Questionnaire
Resource
COMPREHENSIVE PSYCHIATRY v.45 n.1 pp.20-28
Journal
COMPREHENSIVE PSYCHIATRY
Journal Volume
v.45
Journal Issue
n.1
Pages
20-28
Date Issued
2004
Date
2004
Author(s)
KUO, PO-HSIU
Abstract
This study examines the applicability for adolescents of the Tridimensional Personality Questionnaire (TPQ), which was originally designed for adults, as compared to the Junior Eysenck Personality Questionnaire (JEPQ). The study also evaluates their interrelationship and associations with various behavioral problems as reported by parents using the Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL). In a representative community sample of 905 adolescents, the results of internal consistency, test- retest reliability, and factor analysis showed that both the Harm Avoidance (HA) and the Novelty Seeking (NS) scales of the TPQ have sound construct validity , although the Reward Dependence (RD) scale has less so . The intercorrelation and factor analysis of the two questionnaires showed that the TPQ and the JEPQ are not simply alternative descriptions of the same construct of personality. In their associations with various behavioral problems, the scales of the TPQ are relatively more specifically associated with behavioral problems than the scales of the JEPQ. Our results provide empirical support for the applicability of the NS and the HA scales of the TPQ in adolescents, particularly in relation to behavioral problems. (C) 2004 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Subjects
CONFIRMATORY FACTOR-ANALYSIS
CONSTRUCT-VALIDITY
SUBSTANCE USE
PSYCHOMETRIC PROPERTIES
GENETIC-STRUCTURE
NOVELTY SEEKING
