Robust dimensions of anxiety sensitivity: Development and initial validation of the Anxiety Sensitivity Index-3.

Steven Taylor(University of British Columbia), Michael J. Zvolensky(University of Vermont), Brian J. Cox(University of Manitoba), Brett J. Deacon(University of Wyoming), Richard G. Heimberg(Temple University), Deborah Roth Ledley(Temple University), Jonathan S. Abramowitz(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Robert M. Holaway(Temple University), Bonifacio Sandín(Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia), Sherry H. Stewart(Dalhousie University), Meredith E. Coles(State University of New York), Winnie Eng(City University of New York), Erin S. Daly(Boston University), Willem A. Arrindell(University of Groningen), Martine Bouvard(Université Savoie Mont Blanc), Samuel Jurado Cárdenas(Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México)
Psychological Assessment
June 1, 2007
Cited by 1,841

Abstract

Accumulating evidence suggests that anxiety sensitivity (fear of arousal-related sensations) plays an important role in many clinical conditions, particularly anxiety disorders. Research has increasingly focused on how the basic dimensions of anxiety sensitivity are related to various forms of psychopathology. Such work has been hampered because the original measure--the Anxiety Sensitivity Index (ASI)--was not designed to be multidimensional. Subsequently developed multidimensional measures have unstable factor structures or measure only a subset of the most widely replicated factors. Therefore, the authors developed, via factor analysis of responses from U.S. and Canadian nonclinical participants (n=2,361), an 18-item measure, the ASI-3, which assesses the 3 factors best replicated in previous research: Physical, Cognitive, and Social Concerns. Factorial validity of the ASI-3 was supported by confirmatory factor analyses of 6 replication samples, including nonclinical samples from the United States and Canada, France, Mexico, the Netherlands, and Spain (n=4,494) and a clinical sample from the United States and Canada (n=390). The ASI-3 displayed generally good performance on other indices of reliability and validity, along with evidence of improved psychometric properties over the original ASI.


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