Author
Listed:
- William Tamayo-Agudelo
- María J Jaén-Moreno
- María O León-Campos
- Jorge Holguín-Lew
- Rogelio Luque-Luque
- Vaughan Bell
Abstract
The Cardiff Anomalous Perceptions Scale (CAPS) is a psychometric measure of hallucinatory experience. It has been widely used in English and used in initial studies in Spanish but a full validation study has not yet been published. We report a validation study of the Spanish-language CAPS, conducted in both Spain and Colombia to cover both European and Latin American Spanish. The Spanish-language version of the CAPS was produced through back translation with slight modifications made for local dialects. In Spain, 329 non-clinical participants completed the CAPS along with 40 patients with psychosis. In Colombia, 190 non-clinical participants completed the CAPS along with 21 patients with psychosis. Participants completed other psychometric scales measuring psychosis-like experience to additionally test convergent and divergent validity. The Spanish-language CAPS was found to have good internal reliability. Test-retest reliability was slightly below the cut-off, although could only be tested in the Spanish non-clinical sample. The scale showed solid construct validity and a principal components analysis broadly replicated previously reported three component factor structures for the CAPS.
Suggested Citation
William Tamayo-Agudelo & María J Jaén-Moreno & María O León-Campos & Jorge Holguín-Lew & Rogelio Luque-Luque & Vaughan Bell, 2019.
"Validation of the Spanish-language Cardiff Anomalous Perception Scale,"
PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 14(3), pages 1-11, March.
Handle:
RePEc:plo:pone00:0213425
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0213425
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