Abstract

The reliable longitudinal assessment of Internet Gaming Disorder (IGD) behaviors is viewed by many as a pivotal clinical and research priority. The present study is the first to examine the test-retest measurement invariance of IGD ratings, as assessed using the short-form nine-item Internet Gaming Disorder Scale (IGDS9-SF) over an approximate period of 3 months, across two normative national samples. Differences referring to the mode of the data collection (face-to-face [FtF] vs. online) were also considered. Two sequences of successive multiple group confirmatory factor analyses (CFAs) were calculated to longitudinally assess the psychometric properties of the IGDS9-SF using emergent adults, gamers from (i) the United States of America (USA; N = 120, 18–29 years, Meanage = 22.35, 51.6% male) assessed online and; and (ii) Australia (N = 61, 18–31 years, Meanage = 23.02, 75.4% male) assessed FtF. Configural invariance was established across both samples, and metric and scalar invariances were supported for the USA sample. Interestingly, only partial metric (factor loadings for Items 2 and 3 non-invariant) and partial scalar invariance (i.e., all thresholds of Items 1 and 2, and thresholds 1, 3, for Items 4, 6, 8, and 9 non-invariant) were established for the Australian sample. Findings are discussed in the light of using IGDS9-SF to assess and monitor IGD behaviors over time in both in clinical and non-clinical settings.

Highlights

  • The reliable longitudinal assessment of Internet Gaming Disorder (IGD) behaviors is viewed by many as a pivotal clinical and research priority

  • The introduction of IGD (APA 2013) enhanced conceptual and construct consistency/validity concerning problematic online gaming (OG), the construct was previously addressed by numerous different definitions and their associated tools/scales4, and psychometric equivalence concerns still pertain with respect to different IGD instruments (Stavropoulos et al 2018b; Anderson et al 2017)

  • Test-retest measurement invariance (MI) analyses for the Australian and American participants proceeded as a second step

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Summary

Introduction

The reliable longitudinal assessment of Internet Gaming Disorder (IGD) behaviors is viewed by many as a pivotal clinical and research priority. Psychometric equivalence issues confirmed across cultures, longitudinal psychometric equivalence of IGD scales remains unassessed, despite repeated recommendations (Gomez et al 2018a; Pontes et al 2017; Stavropoulos et al 2018c). This deficit is important, as in order to evaluate the use of an IGD scale in clinical treatment or developmental community, monitoring requires longitudinal measurement to track clinical efficacy.

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