Validation of the Italian Versions of the Flourishing Scale and of the Scale of Positive and Negative Experience
Author(s) -
Laura Giuntoli,
Francesco Ceccarini,
Claudio Sica,
Corrado Caudek
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
sage open
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.357
H-Index - 32
ISSN - 2158-2440
DOI - 10.1177/2158244016682293
Subject(s) - flourishing , psychology , diener , scale (ratio) , well being , confirmatory factor analysis , eudaimonia , anxiety , measurement invariance , sample (material) , construct validity , social psychology , cognition , positive psychology , developmental psychology , structural equation modeling , psychometrics , life satisfaction , statistics , psychotherapist , philosophy , physics , chemistry , mathematics , epistemology , chromatography , neuroscience , quantum mechanics , psychiatry
Researchers are divided between those who consider well-being as a single global construct and those who maintain the need to keep the hedonic and eudaimonic components of well-being separate. Diener et al. proposed two separate scales for measuring well-being: the Flourishing Scale (FS) for eudaimonic well-being and the Scale of Positive and Negative Experience (SPANE) for hedonic well-being. The aim of this article is to validate the Italian versions of the FS and SPANE, and to provide support for the usefulness of distinct measures of well-being components. In Study 1, we examined an Italian undergraduate student sample (n = 684), whereas in Study 2 we considered two samples of unemployed (n = 282) and healthy control individuals (n = 426). Through multigroup confirmatory factor analysis, we demonstrated that the Italian FS and SPANE obtained strict measurement invariance across administration methods (paper-and-pencil and Internet) and strong measurement invariance across different groups (unemployed individuals seeking work and a healthy control group). In our data, we found a superior fit for a two-factor model over a one-factor model of well-being, which suggests the utility of separate measures of well-being components. Concurrent validity was verified with other well-being, depression, and anxiety measures. Furthermore, we showed that flourishing is more strongly related to the cognitive component of subjective well-being than hedonic affect. In summary, the Italian FS and SPANE are reliable and valid instruments, and may be beneficial in their applications in future Italian studies on well-being
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