Psychometric properties of the Dickman Impulsivity Inventory
Introduction
Impulsivity has been described by a number of overlapping and sometimes contradictory definitions (McCown et al., 1993, Webster and Jackson, 1997). These include “human behavior without adequate thought” (Smith, 1952), “behavior with no thought whatsoever” (English, 1928), “action of instinct without recourse to ego restraint” (Demont, 1933) and “swift action of mind without forethought of conscious judgement” (Hinslie & Shatzky, 1940). Impulsivity may also mean acting with minimal thought regarding future actions, or acting on thoughts that are not in the individual's or others' best interest (Anon, 1951). Attempts to describe the construct of impulsivity empirically are at least 40 years old and continue to this day. In the excellent book by Doob (1990), impulsiveness is defined as the absence of reflection between an environmental stimulus and an individual's response. According to this definition, the appropriateness of impulsiveness is largely a function of the demands of the situation at hand. Some stimuli, such as a car suddenly braking on a crowded freeway, may demand immediate behavior without deliberation. Lengthy reflection regarding all of the possible options may prove harmful or even fatal. On the other hand, many situations require careful reflection of all possible responses (McCown et al., 1993).
Recent work on the relationship between impulsivity and cognitive functioning, also suggest that the consequences of impulsivity are not always negative. For example, when the experimental task is very simple, high impulsives, rapid responding has little cost in errors (Dickman, 1985). And when the time available for making a decision is extremely brief, high impulsives are actually more accurate than low impulsives (Dickman & Meyer, 1988).
One question raised by these findings (Dickman, 1990) is whether the factor that causes people to respond quickly and inaccurately when this style of responding is a source of difficulty (dysfunctional impulsivity) is the same factor that causes people to respond quickly and inaccurately when this style is optimal (functional impulsivity). It could be that there is a general tendency to respond quickly and inaccurately that is sometimes a source of difficulty and sometimes beneficial. Or, it could be that there are two separate traits, one that results in rapid inaccurate performance in situations where this is optimal and the other that results in rapid, inaccurate performance in situations where this is nonoptimal.
To determine whether it was possible to discriminate within the self-report domain between functional and dysfunctional impulsivity, Dickman (1990) wrote a large number of items designed specifically to tap these two types of impulsivity and then factor-analysed subjects' responses to these items in order to see whether the two hypothesised factors would emerge. The item pool used in this factor analysis contained 17 items written to tap functional impulsivity and 23 items designed to tap dysfunctional impulsivity. There were also 23 filler items. The first two factors that emerged from this analysis clearly represented the two hypothesised components of impulsivity. The 11 items that loaded over 0.30 on factor 1 had all been written to tap functional impulsivity, whereas the 12 items that loaded over 0.30 on factor 2 had all been written to tap dysfunctional impulsivity. These 23 items (11 functional and 12 dysfunctional items) formed the Dickman Impulsivity Inventory, short version (DII-short).
The current research was carried out in an attempt to provide a Dutch translation of the DII-short and to explore the factor structure and scale properties of this questionnaire in a Dutch-speaking Belgian sample. We further examine the convergence between the DII and another well-known measurement of impulsivity, the Eysenck Impulsivity Questionnaire (Eysenck & Eysenck, 1978). Finally, we present data on the relationship with educational level, age and gender. Most studies (Eysenck, Pearson, Easting & Allsopp, 1985) have found a decline in impulsivity with age and show that men are equal or more impulsive than women (Eysenck et al., 1985; Luengo, Carrillo-De-La-Pena & Otero, 1991).
Section snippets
Subjects
Ss were 315 adults, representative for the Flemish population, who were recruited by students in psychology. Each student was given a profile of three persons he or she had to look for, specifying gender, age and educational level in order to guarantee a good cross-section of the population. There were 159 male (50.5%) and 156 female (49.5%) respondents. Five different age ranges were represented: 18–24 years (16.5%), 25–34 years (25.3%), 35–44 years (25.0%), 45–54 years (18.8%) and 55–65 years
Factor analysis of the DII-short
The correlation matrix of the 23 items was factor-analysed using the principal axis method, with the communalities estimated iteratively. The criterion for factor extraction was an eigenvalue equal or greater than 1. The factor matrix was rotated using an oblique rotation (oblimin, with delta set to 0). The first two factors explained 37.3% of the total variance (Table 1) and represented the two expected components of impulsivity. Ten of the 11 items that loaded over 0.35 on factor 1 had all
Discussion
The current study presents a factor analysis of the Dutch DII. As expected, a two-factor solution emerged, each factor representing one of the two types of impulsivity, named Dysfunctional and Functional Impulsivity. Except for three items, all items are found to belong to the same subscales in both versions, which again indicates that the internal factor structure of the DII is consistent across samples (American people versus Flemish people). This concordance between both versions of the DII
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2016, Psychiatry ResearchCitation Excerpt :As regards the AVL-AV, we used data of a validation study on the Short-Form Buss-Perry Aggression Questionnaire (BPAQ-SF) among US federal offenders (Diamond and Magaletta, 2006) and data of a study by Hornsveld et al. (2009) among various groups of clinical and ambulant violent male offenders (N=344) and various groups of male teenagers (N=160). We compared our scores on dysfunctional impulsivity to data of Claes et al. (2000) of a psychometric study to the DII among a general sample of Belgian adults (N=315). We used BVAQ findings of Vorst and Bermond (2001) collected among Dutch university students (N=375).