Testing the latent structure, factorial equivalence, and external correlates of the brief self-control scale in a community sample of Spanish adults
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Torres Marín, Jorge; Gómez-Benito, Juana; Guerrero, Estefania; Guilera, Georgina; Barrios, MaiteEditorial
Public Library of Science
Date
2024-02-23Referencia bibliográfica
Torres-Marín J, Gómez-Benito J, Guerrero E, Guilera G, Barrios M (2024) Testing the latent structure, factorial equivalence, and external correlates of the brief self-control scale in a community sample of Spanish adults. PLoS ONE 19(2): e0296719. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0296719
Sponsorship
Agency for Management of University and Research Grants (AGAUR) of the Government of Catalonia, grant number 2021SGR01071; Postdoctoral fellowship “Margarita Salas” at the University of Granada, financed by the European Union (EU) – Next Generation EU fundsAbstract
The Brief Self-Control Scale (BSCS) is a 13-item personality measure capturing how people
differ in their capacity to exert self-control. Although the BSCS was originally regarded as a
one-dimensional scale, subsequent psychometric studies have provided support for the
empirical distinction of two and four interrelated but distinct components of self-control.
Using a large sample of Spanish adults (n = 1,558; 914 female, 58.7%), we performed a
comprehensive data-driven comparison of the most well-established item-level latent structures
for the BSCS. Results showed that the differentiation between general self-discipline
and impulse control offered a better fit to the observed data than did the unidimensional
representation of self-control. This two-dimensional structure for the BSCS scores was also
supported in terms of its internal consistency, measurement invariance across gender and
age groups, and meaningful correlations with wellbeing-related indicators and Big Five personality
traits. Plausible implications of these findings are discussed.