Characterising the latent structure and organisation of self-reported thoughts, feelings and behaviours in adolescents and young adults.

Little is known about the underlying relationships between self-reported mental health items measuring both positive and negative emotional and behavioural symptoms at the population level in young people. Improved measurement of the full range of mental well-being and mental illness may aid in unde...

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Main Authors: Michelle C St Clair, Sharon Neufeld, Peter B Jones, Peter Fonagy, Edward T Bullmore, Raymond J Dolan, Michael Moutoussis, Umar Toseeb, Ian M Goodyer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0175381&type=printable
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author Michelle C St Clair
Sharon Neufeld
Peter B Jones
Peter Fonagy
Edward T Bullmore
Raymond J Dolan
Michael Moutoussis
Umar Toseeb
Ian M Goodyer
author_facet Michelle C St Clair
Sharon Neufeld
Peter B Jones
Peter Fonagy
Edward T Bullmore
Raymond J Dolan
Michael Moutoussis
Umar Toseeb
Ian M Goodyer
author_sort Michelle C St Clair
collection DOAJ
description Little is known about the underlying relationships between self-reported mental health items measuring both positive and negative emotional and behavioural symptoms at the population level in young people. Improved measurement of the full range of mental well-being and mental illness may aid in understanding the aetiological substrates underlying the development of both mental wellness as well as specific psychiatric diagnoses. A general population sample aged 14 to 24 years completed self-report questionnaires on anxiety, depression, psychotic-like symptoms, obsessionality and well-being. Exploratory and confirmatory factor models for categorical data and latent profile analyses were used to evaluate the structure of both mental wellness and illness items. First order, second order and bifactor structures were evaluated on 118 self-reported items obtained from 2228 participants. A bifactor solution was the best fitting latent variable model with one general latent factor termed 'distress' and five 'distress independent' specific factors defined as self-confidence, antisocial behaviour, worry, aberrant thinking, and mood. Next, six distinct subgroups were derived from a person-centred latent profile analysis of the factor scores. Finally, concurrent validity was assessed using information on hazardous behaviours (alcohol use, substance misuse, self-harm) and treatment for mental ill health: both discriminated between the latent traits and latent profile subgroups. The findings suggest a complex, multidimensional mental health structure in the youth population rather than the previously assumed first or second order factor structure. Additionally, the analysis revealed a low hazardous behaviour/low mental illness risk subgroup not previously described. Population sub-groups show greater validity over single variable factors in revealing mental illness risks. In conclusion, our findings indicate that the structure of self reported mental health is multidimensional in nature and uniquely finds improved prediction to mental illness risk within person-centred subgroups derived from the multidimensional latent traits.
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spelling doaj-art-e0ae7be8c57f43fba058de30e22c7e482025-08-20T02:03:12ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01124e017538110.1371/journal.pone.0175381Characterising the latent structure and organisation of self-reported thoughts, feelings and behaviours in adolescents and young adults.Michelle C St ClairSharon NeufeldPeter B JonesPeter FonagyEdward T BullmoreRaymond J DolanMichael MoutoussisUmar ToseebIan M GoodyerLittle is known about the underlying relationships between self-reported mental health items measuring both positive and negative emotional and behavioural symptoms at the population level in young people. Improved measurement of the full range of mental well-being and mental illness may aid in understanding the aetiological substrates underlying the development of both mental wellness as well as specific psychiatric diagnoses. A general population sample aged 14 to 24 years completed self-report questionnaires on anxiety, depression, psychotic-like symptoms, obsessionality and well-being. Exploratory and confirmatory factor models for categorical data and latent profile analyses were used to evaluate the structure of both mental wellness and illness items. First order, second order and bifactor structures were evaluated on 118 self-reported items obtained from 2228 participants. A bifactor solution was the best fitting latent variable model with one general latent factor termed 'distress' and five 'distress independent' specific factors defined as self-confidence, antisocial behaviour, worry, aberrant thinking, and mood. Next, six distinct subgroups were derived from a person-centred latent profile analysis of the factor scores. Finally, concurrent validity was assessed using information on hazardous behaviours (alcohol use, substance misuse, self-harm) and treatment for mental ill health: both discriminated between the latent traits and latent profile subgroups. The findings suggest a complex, multidimensional mental health structure in the youth population rather than the previously assumed first or second order factor structure. Additionally, the analysis revealed a low hazardous behaviour/low mental illness risk subgroup not previously described. Population sub-groups show greater validity over single variable factors in revealing mental illness risks. In conclusion, our findings indicate that the structure of self reported mental health is multidimensional in nature and uniquely finds improved prediction to mental illness risk within person-centred subgroups derived from the multidimensional latent traits.https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0175381&type=printable
spellingShingle Michelle C St Clair
Sharon Neufeld
Peter B Jones
Peter Fonagy
Edward T Bullmore
Raymond J Dolan
Michael Moutoussis
Umar Toseeb
Ian M Goodyer
Characterising the latent structure and organisation of self-reported thoughts, feelings and behaviours in adolescents and young adults.
PLoS ONE
title Characterising the latent structure and organisation of self-reported thoughts, feelings and behaviours in adolescents and young adults.
title_full Characterising the latent structure and organisation of self-reported thoughts, feelings and behaviours in adolescents and young adults.
title_fullStr Characterising the latent structure and organisation of self-reported thoughts, feelings and behaviours in adolescents and young adults.
title_full_unstemmed Characterising the latent structure and organisation of self-reported thoughts, feelings and behaviours in adolescents and young adults.
title_short Characterising the latent structure and organisation of self-reported thoughts, feelings and behaviours in adolescents and young adults.
title_sort characterising the latent structure and organisation of self reported thoughts feelings and behaviours in adolescents and young adults
url https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0175381&type=printable
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