Lee Matthew R, Bartholow Bruce D, McCarthy Denis M, Pedersen Sarah L, Sher Kenneth J
Department of Psychological Sciences.
Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh.
Psychol Addict Behav. 2015 Mar;29(1):231-6. doi: 10.1037/adb0000015. Epub 2014 Aug 18.
A low level of response to alcohol is considered a significant risk factor for alcohol use disorder. Survey measures of this construct assess the number of drinks required to experience various alcohol effects, so data will be missing for effects participants have not experienced. Furthermore, missingness will likely be more common for items with higher means, as more severe effects are likely experienced both less commonly and at higher consumption levels. We explored whether these atypical characteristics of response-to-alcohol survey data cause problems when using conventional person-mean imputation scoring. This scoring approach involves averaging across nonmissing items for each participant, implicitly assuming that missing items have similar distributional properties (e.g., means) as nonmissing items. Analyses used data from the most commonly utilized response-to-alcohol survey measure: The Self-Rating of the Effects of Alcohol Scale (SRE). Results (a) revealed a strong relationship between higher item means and greater item missingness, (b) established that this relation causes person-mean imputation to produce more downwardly biased response-to-alcohol summary scores for participants with more missing data, (c) established that this induced a spurious relationship between higher response-to-alcohol summary scores and higher alcohol-effect endorsement (i.e., the number of SRE alcohol effects experienced), and (d) found that these biases can be reduced with 2 alternative scoring approaches. We discuss these and other potential problems with person-mean imputation, and common and unique advantages of the 2 alternative approaches. We consider generalizability, including how the problems shown here may vary in practical significance across different populations and measures. (PsycINFO Database Record
对酒精的低反应水平被认为是酒精使用障碍的一个重要风险因素。对这一构念的调查测量评估了体验各种酒精效应所需的饮酒量,因此对于参与者未体验到的效应,数据将会缺失。此外,对于均值较高的项目,缺失情况可能更为常见,因为更严重的效应可能既较少出现,又发生在较高的饮酒水平上。我们探讨了在使用传统的个人均值插补评分时,酒精反应调查数据的这些非典型特征是否会导致问题。这种评分方法涉及对每个参与者的非缺失项目进行平均,隐含地假设缺失项目具有与非缺失项目相似的分布特性(例如均值)。分析使用了最常用的酒精反应调查测量方法的数据:酒精效应自评量表(SRE)。结果(a)显示项目均值越高与项目缺失率越高之间存在很强的关系,(b)确定这种关系导致个人均值插补对于缺失数据较多的参与者产生向下偏差更大的酒精反应汇总分数,(c)确定这在较高的酒精反应汇总分数与较高的酒精效应认可(即体验到的SRE酒精效应数量)之间诱发了一种虚假关系,并且(d)发现使用两种替代评分方法可以减少这些偏差。我们讨论了个人均值插补的这些及其他潜在问题,以及这两种替代方法的共同和独特优势。我们考虑了可推广性,包括此处所示问题在不同人群和测量方法中的实际意义可能如何变化。(PsycINFO数据库记录