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      The Brief Symptom Inventory: an introductory report

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      Psychological Medicine
      Cambridge University Press (CUP)

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          Synopsis

          This is an introductory report for the Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI), a brief psychological self-report symptom scale. The BSI was developed from its longer parent instrument, the SCL-90-R, and psychometric evaluation reveals it to be an acceptable short alternative to the complete scale. Both test-retest and internal consistency reliabilities are shown to be very good for the primary symptom dimensions of the BSI, and its correlations with the comparable dimensions of the SCL-90-R are quite high. In terms of validation, high convergence between BSI scales and like dimensions of the MMPI provide good evidence of convergent validity, and factor analytic studies of the internal structure of the scale contribute evidence of construct validity. Several criterion-oriented validity studies have also been completed with this instrument

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          The SCL-90 and the MMPI: a step in the validation of a new self-report scale.

          The present investigation was intended principally as a concurrent validation study for a new self-report symptom inventory: the SCL-90. A sample of 209 'symptomatic volunteers' served as subjects and were administered both the SCL-90 and the MMPI prior to participation in clinical therapeutic drug trials. The MMPI was scored for the Wiggins content scales and the Tryon cluster scales in addition to the standard clinical scales. Comparisons of the nine primary symptom dimensions of the SCL-90 with the set of MMPI scales reflected very high convergent validity for the SCL-90. Peak correlations were observed with like constructs on eight of the nine scales, with secondary patterns of correlations showing high interpretative consistency.
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            Confirmation of the dimensional structure of the scl-90: A study in construct validation

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              An Overview of Psychological Measurement

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Psychological Medicine
                Psychol. Med.
                Cambridge University Press (CUP)
                0033-2917
                1469-8978
                August 1983
                July 09 2009
                August 1983
                : 13
                : 3
                : 595-605
                Article
                10.1017/S0033291700048017
                6622612
                38502d6d-e7b8-4d4a-8bbb-558a2ad52087
                © 1983

                https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms

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