@article{rpbs20231123,
author={Hart, Peter D.},
title={Perceived Happiness and General Health: An IRT Investigation},
journal={Research in Psychology and Behavioral Sciences},
volume={11},
number={2},
pages={49--55},
year={2023},
url={https://pubs.sciepub.com/rpbs/11/2/3},
issn={2333-438X},
abstract={<b>Background</b>: Measuring latent outcomes such as patient satisfaction, health-related quality of life, and depression has been a common procedure in medical and epidemiological research. However, assessing the latent construct of perceived happiness has been less prevalent. Moreover, recent pilot data suggest that perceived happiness may serve as a useful outcome in epidemiological studies. Therefore, the aim of this study was to evaluate an existing measure of perceived happiness using advanced psychometric analyses. <b>Methods</b>: Participants in this study were <i>N</i> = 302 adults, 18+ years of age, who completed an electronic health and fitness survey. Happiness was assessed using the Subjective Happiness Scale (SHS). The SHS is a four-item scale with seven response categories measuring general happiness from intrinsic and relative perspectives. A graded response item-response theory (IRT) model was used to psychometrically evaluate the SHS. Additionally, a single item general health measure was used to further validate the SHS. SAS procedures including PROC IRT were applied. <b>Results</b>: The IRT analysis indicated that all four items fit a unidimensional construct with large item slopes (1.71 to 4.98) and varied item thresholds (-3.13 to 1.12). Factor analysis of the SHS polychoric correlation matrix retained a single factor explaining 77.8% variance. Additionally, internal consistency reliability (¦Á = 0.88) indicated a reliable SHS. Finally, SHS scores examined between known groups showed that those reporting good general health had significantly (<i>p</i> &lt; .001) greater perceived happiness than those reporting poor general health. <b>Conclusion</b>: Results from this study show that a brief four-item perceived happiness scale may have value in epidemiological research.},
doi={10.12691/rpbs-11-2-3}
publisher={Science and Education Publishing}
}
