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Preliminary investigation of the psychometric measurement of hunger and pleasure
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Journal of Advanced Practices in Nursing

ISSN: 2573-0347

Open Access

Preliminary investigation of the psychometric measurement of hunger and pleasure


33rd Euro Nursing & Medicare Summit

October 08-10, 2018 | Edinburgh, Scotland

Dale M Hilty

Mount Carmel College of Nursing, USA

Posters & Accepted Abstracts: Adv Practice Nurs

Abstract :

Fernandez's anger parameters scale (APS) conceptualizes anger activity according to frequency, duration, intensity, latency and threshold. The first three of the five parameters are based on the multidimensional anger inventory (MAI) subscales while latency and threshold measures are related to pain and other perceptual responses. Thus, we have five parameters measuring: how often one gets angry; how long the anger lasts; how strong the anger is; how quick to anger and; how sensitive to provocation. Cronbach reliability estimates for an adult community sample were .85 (frequency), .90 (duration), .62 (intensity), .88 (latency) and .74 (threshold). Five anger parameters were extracted with a principal components analysis (PCA). A separate PCA analysis based on the subscale inter-correlations led to a one-component solution termed the degree of maladaptiveness of anger. The parameters are internally consistent and supported by preliminary factor analytic investigation. Fernandez and colleagues report significant differences on the frequency, intensity and duration scales with the forensic sample (N=125) having high scores on these three parameters than a non-forensic (N=182) samples. The purpose of the educational intervention was to apply the Fernandez five parameters model (frequency, duration, intensity, latency and threshold) to the constructs of hunger and pleasure. Participants were 130 traditional undergraduate nursing students. Principal-axis factor analysis and Cronbach reliability estimates found two common factors were extracted for the hunger and pleasure constructs with reliability coefficients above .80.

Biography :

Dale M Hilty has completed his PhD in Counseling Psychology at The Ohio State University, Department of Psychology. He has published studies in the areas of psychology, sociology and religion. Between April 2017 and April 2018, his ten research teams published 55 posters at local, state, regional, national and international nursing conferences.

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