Article
Test of Invariance of the Anomie brief scale with the alignment method in 12 Latin American countries
Autor
Caycho-Rodríguez, Tomás
Vilca, Lindsey W.
Ventura-León, José
Carbajal-León, Carlos
Valencia, Pablo D.
Reyes-Bossio, Mario
Delgado-Campusano, Mariel
Yupanqui-Lorenzo, Daniel E.
Paredes-Angeles, Rubí
Rojas-Jara, Claudio
Gallegos, Miguel
Cervigni, Mauricio
Martino, Pablo
Polanco-Carrasco, Roberto
Palacios, Diego Alejandro
Moreta-Herrera, Rodrigo
Samaniego‑Pinho, Antonio
Lobos-Rivera, Marlon Elías
Buschiazzo Figares, Andrés
Puerta‑Cortés, Diana Ximena
Corrales‑Reyes, Ibraín Enrique
Calderón, Raymundo
Arias Gallegos, Walter L.
Petzold, Olimpia
Camargo, Andrés
Torales, Julio
Monge Blanco, J. Arkangel
González, Pedronel
Smith-Castro, Vanessa
Matute Rivera, Wendy Yamilet
Ferrufino-Borja, Daniela
Ceballos-Vásquez, Paula
Muñoz-del-Carpio-Toia, Agueda
Palacios, Jorge
Burgos-Videla, Carmen
Florez León, Ana María Eduviges
Vergara, Ibeth
Vega, Diego
Shulmeyer, Marion K.
Institución
Resumen
The Social Anomie Brief Scale (SAS10) is a self-report measure of social anomie against new social standards implemented during the current COVID-19 pandemic. The main objective of this study was to evaluate the invariance of the cross-cultural measurement of the SAS10 in a sample of 12 Latin American countries. Additionally, the difficulty and discrimination characteristics of the items were evaluated using the IRT and social anomie was compared between the participating countries. A total of 4,911 people from 12 Latin American countries (Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Cuba, Ecuador, Guatemala, Mexico, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay, and Venezuela) selected by non-probabilistic snowball sampling participated. The results indicated that the original two-factor model of the SAS10 shows estimation problems and low fit indices in several countries. However, a model of two related dimensions (behavioral and affective) of nine items (SAS-9) presented adequate fit indices in all countries. This model presents adequate estimation of reliability and approximate cross-cultural measurement invariance. Peru was the country with the highest score in the behavioral dimension of social anomie; while Venezuela and Bolivia presented the highest scores in the affective dimension. Mexico was one of the countries with the lowest anomie scores. The results of the IRT would indicate that the characteristics of the SAS-9 items were appropriate. It is concluded that the SAS-9 has shown good psychometric properties when evaluated in 12 Latin American countries and can be used in future studies that compare social anomie cross-culturally.