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Наслов: Measurement invariance of the Childhood Autism Rating Scale ( <scp>CARS</scp> ) across six countries
Authors: Stevanovic, Dejan
Costanzo, Floriana
Fucà, Elisa
Valeri, Giovanni
Vicari, Stefano
Robins, Diana L.
Samms‐Vaughan, Maureen
Ozek Erkuran, Handan
Yaylaci, Ferhat
Deshpande, Smita N.
Deshmukh, Vaishali
Arora, Narendra K.
Albores‐Gallo, Lilia
García‐López, Cristina
Gatica‐Bahamonde, Gabriel
Gabunia, Maia
Zirakashvili, Medea
Machado, Fernanda Prada
Radan, Miruna
Samadi, Sayyed Ali
TOH, Teck‐Hock
Gayle, Windham
Brennan, Laura
Zorcec, Tatjana 
Auza, Alejandra
Jonge, Maretha
Shoqirat, Noordeen
Marini, Anita
Knez, Rajna
Issue Date: 4-авг-2021
Publisher: Wiley
Journal: Autism Research
Abstract: The Childhood Autism Rating Scale (CARS) is a simple and inexpensive tool for Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) assessments, with evidenced psychometric data from different countries. However, it is still unclear whether ASD symptoms are measured the same way across different societies and world regions with this tool, since data on its cross-cultural validity are lacking. This study evaluated the cross-cultural measurement invariance of the CARS among children with ASD from six countries, for whom data were aggregated from previous studies in India (n = 101), Jamaica (n = 139), Mexico (n = 72), Spain (n = 99), Turkey (n = 150), and the United States of America (n = 186). We analyzed the approximate measurement invariance based on Bayesian structural equation modeling. The model did not fit the data and its measurement invariance did not hold, with all items found non-invariant across the countries. Items related to social communication and interaction (i.e., relating to people, imitation, emotional response, and verbal and nonverbal communication) displayed lower levels of cross-country non-invariance compared to items about stereotyped behaviors/sensory sensitivity (i.e., body and object use, adaptation to change, or taste, smell, and touch response). This study found that the CARS may not provide cross-culturally valid ASD assessments. Thus, cross-cultural comparisons with the CARS should consider first which items operate differently across samples of interest, since its cross-cultural measurement non-invariance could be a source of cross-cultural variability in ASD presentations. Additional studies are needed before drawing valid recommendations in relation to the cultural sensitivity of particular items.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12188/22031
DOI: 10.1002/aur.2586
Appears in Collections:Faculty of Medicine: Journal Articles

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