Skip to main content

Compensatory Cognitive Strategy Use by Young Adults: A Psychometric Evaluation of Self-Report Measures.

Author
Abstract
:

This study examined the reliability and validity of scores from questionnaires assessing compensatory cognitive strategy use by young adults. Participants ( = 783; 79.6% women; 77.4% White; Age: = 18.7 ± 0.9 years) completed the Compensatory Cognitive Strategies Scale (CCSS), Metamemory Questionnaire-Strategies (MMQ-S), Neuro-Quality of Life (Neuro-QoL) v2.0 Short Form-Cognitive Function, and Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale (DERS). Reliability estimates were acceptable for the CCSS (α = .85) and MMQ-S (α = .86) in the full sample and comparable in subsamples stratified by gender and self-reported mental health conditions. The CCSS and MMQ-S scores showed evidence for convergent validity ( range: .60 to .70) and discriminant validity in the full sample and subsamples ( with DERS range: .13 to .33). Greater compensatory strategy use had small-to-medium associations with greater subjective cognitive concerns on the Neuro-QOL for the full sample and subsamples ( range: -.19 to -.49). The CCSS and MMQ-S scores showed acceptable properties for use with young adults.

Year of Publication
:
2022
Journal
:
Assessment
Volume
:
29
Issue
:
3
Number of Pages
:
441-454
ISSN Number
:
1073-1911
URL
:
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/1073191120981769?url_ver=Z39.88-2003&rfr_id=ori:rid:crossref.org&rfr_dat=cr_pub%3dpubmed
DOI
:
10.1177/1073191120981769
Short Title
:
Assessment
Download citation