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Do We Need Multiple Informants When Assessing Autistic Traits? The Degree of Report Bias on Offspring, Self, and Spouse Ratings
by
Rommelse, Nanda N. J.
, Buitelaar, Jan K.
, Möricke, Esmé
in
Adult
/ Adults
/ Agreements
/ Analysis
/ Autism
/ Autism Spectrum Disorder - diagnosis
/ Autism Spectrum Disorders
/ Autistic children
/ Behavioral Science and Psychology
/ Bias
/ Care and treatment
/ Child & adolescent psychiatry
/ Child and School Psychology
/ Child, Preschool
/ Children
/ Children & youth
/ Communication
/ Complications and side effects
/ Correlation
/ Evidence Based Practice
/ Fathers
/ Female
/ Genetics
/ Genotype & phenotype
/ Humans
/ Interpersonal Communication
/ Interpersonal Competence
/ Interrater Reliability
/ Interviews
/ Male
/ Middle Aged
/ Mothers
/ Neurosciences
/ Observer Variation
/ Offspring
/ Original Paper
/ Parent Attitudes
/ Parent Child Relationship
/ Parents
/ Parents & parenting
/ Parents - psychology
/ Pediatrics
/ Pervasive Developmental Disorders
/ Preschool Children
/ Psychiatry
/ Psychology
/ Psychology, Pathological
/ Psychopathology
/ Public Health
/ Questionnaires
/ Ratings & rankings
/ Reliability
/ Reproducibility of Results
/ Respondents
/ Scores
/ Self evaluation
/ Self Report
/ Social Desirability
/ Spouses
/ Spouses - psychology
/ Statistical Analysis
/ Surveys and Questionnaires
/ Symptoms (Individual Disorders)
/ Systematic review
/ Teaching Methods
/ Teenagers
2016
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Do We Need Multiple Informants When Assessing Autistic Traits? The Degree of Report Bias on Offspring, Self, and Spouse Ratings
by
Rommelse, Nanda N. J.
, Buitelaar, Jan K.
, Möricke, Esmé
in
Adult
/ Adults
/ Agreements
/ Analysis
/ Autism
/ Autism Spectrum Disorder - diagnosis
/ Autism Spectrum Disorders
/ Autistic children
/ Behavioral Science and Psychology
/ Bias
/ Care and treatment
/ Child & adolescent psychiatry
/ Child and School Psychology
/ Child, Preschool
/ Children
/ Children & youth
/ Communication
/ Complications and side effects
/ Correlation
/ Evidence Based Practice
/ Fathers
/ Female
/ Genetics
/ Genotype & phenotype
/ Humans
/ Interpersonal Communication
/ Interpersonal Competence
/ Interrater Reliability
/ Interviews
/ Male
/ Middle Aged
/ Mothers
/ Neurosciences
/ Observer Variation
/ Offspring
/ Original Paper
/ Parent Attitudes
/ Parent Child Relationship
/ Parents
/ Parents & parenting
/ Parents - psychology
/ Pediatrics
/ Pervasive Developmental Disorders
/ Preschool Children
/ Psychiatry
/ Psychology
/ Psychology, Pathological
/ Psychopathology
/ Public Health
/ Questionnaires
/ Ratings & rankings
/ Reliability
/ Reproducibility of Results
/ Respondents
/ Scores
/ Self evaluation
/ Self Report
/ Social Desirability
/ Spouses
/ Spouses - psychology
/ Statistical Analysis
/ Surveys and Questionnaires
/ Symptoms (Individual Disorders)
/ Systematic review
/ Teaching Methods
/ Teenagers
2016
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Do We Need Multiple Informants When Assessing Autistic Traits? The Degree of Report Bias on Offspring, Self, and Spouse Ratings
by
Rommelse, Nanda N. J.
, Buitelaar, Jan K.
, Möricke, Esmé
in
Adult
/ Adults
/ Agreements
/ Analysis
/ Autism
/ Autism Spectrum Disorder - diagnosis
/ Autism Spectrum Disorders
/ Autistic children
/ Behavioral Science and Psychology
/ Bias
/ Care and treatment
/ Child & adolescent psychiatry
/ Child and School Psychology
/ Child, Preschool
/ Children
/ Children & youth
/ Communication
/ Complications and side effects
/ Correlation
/ Evidence Based Practice
/ Fathers
/ Female
/ Genetics
/ Genotype & phenotype
/ Humans
/ Interpersonal Communication
/ Interpersonal Competence
/ Interrater Reliability
/ Interviews
/ Male
/ Middle Aged
/ Mothers
/ Neurosciences
/ Observer Variation
/ Offspring
/ Original Paper
/ Parent Attitudes
/ Parent Child Relationship
/ Parents
/ Parents & parenting
/ Parents - psychology
/ Pediatrics
/ Pervasive Developmental Disorders
/ Preschool Children
/ Psychiatry
/ Psychology
/ Psychology, Pathological
/ Psychopathology
/ Public Health
/ Questionnaires
/ Ratings & rankings
/ Reliability
/ Reproducibility of Results
/ Respondents
/ Scores
/ Self evaluation
/ Self Report
/ Social Desirability
/ Spouses
/ Spouses - psychology
/ Statistical Analysis
/ Surveys and Questionnaires
/ Symptoms (Individual Disorders)
/ Systematic review
/ Teaching Methods
/ Teenagers
2016
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Do We Need Multiple Informants When Assessing Autistic Traits? The Degree of Report Bias on Offspring, Self, and Spouse Ratings
Journal Article
Do We Need Multiple Informants When Assessing Autistic Traits? The Degree of Report Bias on Offspring, Self, and Spouse Ratings
2016
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Overview
This study focused on the degree of report bias in assessing autistic traits. Both parents of 124 preschoolers completed the Social Communication Questionnaire and the Autism-spectrum Quotient. Acceptable agreement existed between mother and father reports of children’s mean scores of autistic traits, but interrater reliability for rank-order correlations was only fair. No evidence was found for report bias regarding parent-offspring autistic traits. However, adult autistic ratings were strongly biased: spouse-ratings were higher than self-ratings, correlations were only fair when both parents reported about the same person, and resemblance was higher for reports from the same person than for spouses’ separate self-reports. It is advisable to involve multiple informants when assessing autistic traits, and to use procedural and/or statistical remedies to control for report bias.
Publisher
Springer US,Springer,Springer Nature B.V
Subject
/ Adults
/ Analysis
/ Autism
/ Autism Spectrum Disorder - diagnosis
/ Behavioral Science and Psychology
/ Bias
/ Child & adolescent psychiatry
/ Children
/ Complications and side effects
/ Fathers
/ Female
/ Genetics
/ Humans
/ Male
/ Mothers
/ Parents
/ Pervasive Developmental Disorders
/ Scores
/ Spouses
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