Department of Psychology, Program in Neuroscience, Bucknell University, Lewisburg, PA, USA.
Geisinger Health System, Danville, PA, USA.
J Child Psychol Psychiatry. 2018 May;59(5):574-585. doi: 10.1111/jcpp.12827. Epub 2017 Oct 30.
Healthy functioning relies on a variety of perceptual, cognitive, emotional, and behavioral abilities that are distributed throughout the normal population. Variation in these traits define the wide range of neurodevelopmental (NDD) and neuropsychiatric (NPD) disorders. Here, we introduce a new measure for assessing these traits in typically developing children and children at risk for NDD and NPD from age 2 to 18 years.
The Childhood Oxford-Liverpool Inventory of Feelings and Experiences (CO-LIFE) was created as a dimensional, parent-report measure of schizotypal and psychotic traits in the general population. Parents of 2,786 children also self-reported on an adapted version of the Oxford-Liverpool Inventory of Feelings and Experiences (O-LIFE-US).
The CO-LIFE resulted in continuous distributions for the total score and for each of three factor analytically-derived subscales. Item response theory (IRT) analyses indicated strong reliability across the score range for the O-LIFE-US and the CO-LIFE. Internal consistency and test-retest reliability were high across all scales. Parent-child intraclass correlations were consistent with high heritability. The scales discriminated participants who reported a lifetime psychiatric diagnosis from those who reported no diagnosis. The O-LIFE-US and CO-LIFE scores correlated positively with the Social Responsiveness Scale 2 (SRS-2) indicating good convergent validity.
Like the original O-LIFE, the O-LIFE-US and the CO-LIFE are valid and reliable tools that reflect the spectrum of psychiatric and schizotypal traits in the general population. Such scales are necessary for conducting family studies that aim to examine a range of psychological and behavioral traits in both children and adults and are well-suited for the Research Domain Criteria (RDoC) initiative of the NIMH.
健康功能依赖于各种分布于正常人群中的感知、认知、情感和行为能力。这些特征的变化定义了广泛的神经发育(NDD)和神经精神(NPD)障碍。在这里,我们引入了一种新的测量方法,用于评估 2 至 18 岁的正常发育儿童和有 NDD 和 NPD 风险的儿童的这些特征。
童年牛津利物浦感觉和体验量表(CO-LIFE)是作为一种维度的、家长报告的一般人群中精神分裂症和精神病特征的测量方法而创建的。2786 名儿童的家长还自我报告了适应版的牛津利物浦感觉和体验量表(O-LIFE-US)。
CO-LIFE 产生了总分和三个因子分析衍生的三个分量表的连续分布。项目反应理论(IRT)分析表明,O-LIFE-US 和 CO-LIFE 的得分范围具有很强的可靠性。所有量表的内部一致性和重测信度都很高。父母-孩子的组内相关系数与高遗传性一致。这些量表区分了报告有终生精神科诊断的参与者和报告没有诊断的参与者。O-LIFE-US 和 CO-LIFE 评分与社会反应量表 2(SRS-2)呈正相关,表明具有良好的聚合效度。
与原始的 O-LIFE 一样,O-LIFE-US 和 CO-LIFE 是有效和可靠的工具,反映了一般人群中精神科和精神分裂症特征的范围。这些量表对于进行家庭研究是必要的,这些研究旨在检查儿童和成人的一系列心理和行为特征,并且非常适合 NIMH 的研究领域标准(RDoC)倡议。