Abstract
The analysis of psychological networks has become common in multiple subfields including clinical, social, and personality psychology, where the focus is often on identifying highly central nodes that represent symptoms, beliefs, or traits. However, the boundaries of these networks are often ambiguous and relevant nodes are often missing from the network. In this article, we use a series of simulations to show that even under typical conditions of missingness, the centrality of nodes in an empirical psychological network are poorly correlated or uncorrelated with their centrality in a hypothetical "true" psychological network, and thus are invalid. We illustrate the implications of this lack of validity using an empirical example drawn from a recent study of political belief system networks, demonstrating that the original study would have drawn incorrect conclusions about American's most central political beliefs. We conclude by recommending that centrality measures should be computed and interpreted only in psychological networks that include (nearly) all the nodes inside a theoretically meaningful boundary. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).
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