Sherry Stewart’s research while affiliated with Dalhousie University and other places

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Publications (1)


Taxometric and Factor Analytic Models of Anxiety Sensitivity Among Youth: Exploring the Latent Structure of Anxiety Psychopathology Vulnerability
  • Article

September 2007

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60 Reads

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37 Citations

Behavior Therapy

Amit Bernstein

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Michael J Zvolensky

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Sherry Stewart

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Nancy Comeau

This study represents an effort to better understand the latent structure of anxiety sensitivity (AS), a well-established affect-sensitivity individual difference factor, among youth by employing taxometric and factor analytic approaches in an integrative manner. Taxometric analyses indicated that AS, as indexed by the Child Anxiety Sensitivity Index (CASI; Silverman, Flesig, Rabian, & Peterson, 1991), demonstrates taxonic latent class structure in a large sample of youth from North America (N=4,462; M(age)=15.6 years; SD=1.3). Subsequent confirmatory factor analyses indicated that the latent continuous, multidimensional, 4-factor model of AS among youth (Silverman, Goedhart, Barrett, & Turner, 2003) provided good fit for the CASI data among the complement class ("normative form" of AS), but not among the taxon class ("high-risk form" of AS). EFAs supported the prediction that the AS taxon demonstrates a unique, heretofore unexplored latent continuous, unidimensional factor structure among youth. Findings are discussed in relation to refining our understanding of the latent structure of AS and the clinical implications that arise from it.

Citations (1)


... In addition, the sample studied here was a non-clinical sample. Although this replicates the samples used in the two previous CASI-R investigations, a key next step in the development of the CASI-R would be to examine its structure and validity in a clinical sample in which at least a subset of youth has been diagnosed with an anxiety disorder; this may be particularly important in the case of AS, given that some recent studies have found evidence to suggest that AS operates differently at high (clinical) versus low (non-clinical) levels (e.g., Bernstein et al. 2007) Specifically, it is suggested that whereas a fourfactor AS structure might be most applicable to non-clinical youth, a unifactorial model might best explain the AS construct in high-risk youth (Bernstein et al. 2007). Continued work in this area would be particularly informative as the present results tentatively suggest that at least two CASI-R subscales (Fear of Publicly Observable Reactions and Fear of Cognitive Dyscontrol) might yield psychometrically stronger measures of these AS facets in youth than their parallel CASI scales in older youth. ...

Reference:

A Psychometric Evaluation of the Revised Childhood Anxiety Sensitivity Index (CASI-R) in a Child and Adolescent Sample
Taxometric and Factor Analytic Models of Anxiety Sensitivity Among Youth: Exploring the Latent Structure of Anxiety Psychopathology Vulnerability
  • Citing Article
  • September 2007

Behavior Therapy