Design and interpret validated psychometric instruments for measuring wellbeing outcomes. Use when creating measurement frameworks, selecting assessment tools, designing surveys, or analyzing wellbeing data. Covers reliable scales with strong psychometric properties for research and evaluation.
Rigorous measurement of wellbeing requires validated instruments with strong psychometric properties. This skill guides selection, implementation, and interpretation of evidence-based measurement tools.
Core Psychometric Principles
Validity Types
Construct Validity: Does the instrument measure what it claims to measure?
Criterion Validity: Does it predict relevant outcomes?
Content Validity: Does it comprehensively cover the domain?
Discriminant Validity: Does it distinguish from related but different constructs?
Reliability Indicators
Cronbach's Alpha: Internal consistency (0.7-0.9 is acceptable, 0.6+ for exploratory)
Test-Retest Reliability: Stability over time (typically ICC > 0.7)
Inter-rater Reliability: Agreement between raters (Cohen's kappa, ICC)
Measurement Model Fit
相关技能
CFI/TLI: Comparative fit indices (>0.90 is good)
RMSEA: Root Mean Square Error of Approximation (<0.08 is acceptable)
SRMR: Standardized Root Mean Square Residual (<0.08 is good)
Validated Wellbeing Instruments
Multidimensional Wellbeing Scales
PERMA-Profiler (Kern et al., 2015)
Structure: 23 items across 6 domains
Positive Emotion (hedonic wellbeing)
Engagement (flow, absorption)
Relationships (social connection)
Meaning (life purpose)
Accomplishment (achievement, mastery)
Negative Emotion (reverse-scored)
Strengths: Brief, validated across cultures, theory-grounded (Seligman's PERMA model)
Use for: General wellbeing assessment, product/experience evaluation
Psychometrics: α ≈ 0.70-0.85 across domains
Administration: 5-10 minutes
Personal Wellbeing Index (PWI-8) (International Wellbeing Group)
Structure: 8 life satisfaction domains
Standard of living
Health
Life achievement
Personal relationships
Personal safety
Community connectedness
Future security
Life satisfaction (overall)
Strengths: Short, universal, used in major population studies
Use for: Population-level monitoring, longitudinal tracking
Psychometrics: α ≈ 0.80-0.85
Administration: 3-5 minutes
Hedonic & Eudaimonic Wellbeing
Scale of Positive and Negative Experience (SPANE) (Diener et al., 2010)
Structure: 12 items in 2 factors
Positive experiences (positive, negative reversed, good, bad reversed, etc.)
Negative experiences (negative, worried, sad, etc.)
Strengths: Brief, captures both dimensions, good cross-cultural validity
Use for: Affective wellbeing, emotional state tracking
Psychometrics: α ≈ 0.81-0.89
Administration: 2-3 minutes
Meaning in Life Scale (MLQ) (Steger et al., 2006)
Structure: 5 items in 2 dimensions
Presence of meaning
Search for meaning
Strengths: Concise eudaimonic measure, validated widely
Use for: Purpose and meaning assessment
Psychometrics: α ≈ 0.73-0.90
Administration: 2 minutes
Strengths: Brief, robust factor structure, used widely in research
Use for: General flourishing assessment
Psychometrics: α ≈ 0.87-0.90
Administration: 3 minutes
Domain-Specific Measures
Satisfaction With Life Scale (SWLS) (Diener et al., 1985)
Structure: 5 items measuring global life satisfaction
Strengths: Gold standard for life satisfaction, extensive validation
Psychometrics: α ≈ 0.79-0.89
Administration: 2 minutes
UCLA Loneliness Scale (ULS-8) (Hughes et al., 2004)
Structure: 8 items measuring perceived social isolation
Strengths: Short form, validated, predictive of health outcomes
Psychometrics: α ≈ 0.82
Administration: 2 minutes