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Measuring Paranoid Beliefs in Adolescents: A Comparison of the Revised-Green et al.’s Paranoid Thoughts Scale (R-GPTS) and the Bird Checklist of Adolescent Paranoia (B-CAP)

Measuring Paranoid Beliefs in Adolescents: A Comparison of the Revised-Green et al.’s Paranoid Thoughts Scale (R-GPTS) and the Bird Checklist of Adolescent Paranoia (B-CAP)
Measuring Paranoid Beliefs in Adolescents: A Comparison of the Revised-Green et al.’s Paranoid Thoughts Scale (R-GPTS) and the Bird Checklist of Adolescent Paranoia (B-CAP)
Research on paranoid beliefs in adolescents is in its infancy. Valid and reliable assessments are essential to advancing the field, yet there is no current consensus as to which are optimal to use in this population. This study compared the psychometric properties of two measures of paranoia in a general population adolescent sample. A cross-sectional study with quota sampling (gender and age) recruited adolescents (14-17 years) from the UK (n=262) and USA (n=200), who completed the Revised Green et al. Paranoid Thoughts Scale (R-GPTS) and the Bird Checklist for Adolescent Paranoia (B-CAP). We assessed factor structures, intercorrelations, overlap of participants identified as at-risk for paranoid thoughts via both scales, convergent validity (scales with one another) and discriminant validity (distress, wellbeing, bullying and discrimination). Both scales performed equally well in terms of factorial validity. Intercorrelations between the subscales and with general distress were high for both measures. However, a substantial percentage of participants were identified as having paranoid beliefs according to the R-GPTS but not the B-CAP. Furthermore, the B-CAP showed a very high correlations (0.69≤r≤0.79) with self-reported bullying experiences, which bordered on multicollinearity. Findings highlight the possibility that B-CAP may risk confounding paranoid beliefs with exposure to bullying more so than R-GPTS, and that BCAP may miss instances of elevated paranoia that are captured by the R-GPTS. Future research needs to further explore this by validating both scales with an external (e.g., interview-based) criterion for paranoia.
2730-7174
Schlier, Bjorn
73cc84ba-1bef-41a7-a074-87bb47560c19
Ellett, Lyn
96482ea6-04b6-4a50-a7ec-ae0a3abc20ca
Thomson, Elizabeth
60213273-5964-4fad-9672-cacc7c95960c
Gaudiano, Brandon
ef55ca58-ca90-44e5-90af-67b05f9c05b5
Krkovic, Katarina
b3778182-56a5-40b7-b6a8-910bedd0f2ad
Kingston, Jessica
1960cdaf-ce2b-4f00-9dd8-24b1af5d1daa
Schlier, Bjorn
73cc84ba-1bef-41a7-a074-87bb47560c19
Ellett, Lyn
96482ea6-04b6-4a50-a7ec-ae0a3abc20ca
Thomson, Elizabeth
60213273-5964-4fad-9672-cacc7c95960c
Gaudiano, Brandon
ef55ca58-ca90-44e5-90af-67b05f9c05b5
Krkovic, Katarina
b3778182-56a5-40b7-b6a8-910bedd0f2ad
Kingston, Jessica
1960cdaf-ce2b-4f00-9dd8-24b1af5d1daa

Schlier, Bjorn, Ellett, Lyn, Thomson, Elizabeth, Gaudiano, Brandon, Krkovic, Katarina and Kingston, Jessica (2024) Measuring Paranoid Beliefs in Adolescents: A Comparison of the Revised-Green et al.’s Paranoid Thoughts Scale (R-GPTS) and the Bird Checklist of Adolescent Paranoia (B-CAP). Research on Child and Adolescent Psychopathology.

Record type: Article

Abstract

Research on paranoid beliefs in adolescents is in its infancy. Valid and reliable assessments are essential to advancing the field, yet there is no current consensus as to which are optimal to use in this population. This study compared the psychometric properties of two measures of paranoia in a general population adolescent sample. A cross-sectional study with quota sampling (gender and age) recruited adolescents (14-17 years) from the UK (n=262) and USA (n=200), who completed the Revised Green et al. Paranoid Thoughts Scale (R-GPTS) and the Bird Checklist for Adolescent Paranoia (B-CAP). We assessed factor structures, intercorrelations, overlap of participants identified as at-risk for paranoid thoughts via both scales, convergent validity (scales with one another) and discriminant validity (distress, wellbeing, bullying and discrimination). Both scales performed equally well in terms of factorial validity. Intercorrelations between the subscales and with general distress were high for both measures. However, a substantial percentage of participants were identified as having paranoid beliefs according to the R-GPTS but not the B-CAP. Furthermore, the B-CAP showed a very high correlations (0.69≤r≤0.79) with self-reported bullying experiences, which bordered on multicollinearity. Findings highlight the possibility that B-CAP may risk confounding paranoid beliefs with exposure to bullying more so than R-GPTS, and that BCAP may miss instances of elevated paranoia that are captured by the R-GPTS. Future research needs to further explore this by validating both scales with an external (e.g., interview-based) criterion for paranoia.

Text
JACP-D-23-00254_R2 - Accepted Manuscript
Restricted to Repository staff only until 28 February 2025.
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Published date: 28 February 2024

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 488246
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/488246
ISSN: 2730-7174
PURE UUID: f320711a-3cad-450b-acbf-43e4f6adf4ba
ORCID for Lyn Ellett: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6051-3604

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Date deposited: 19 Mar 2024 17:37
Last modified: 20 Mar 2024 03:04

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Contributors

Author: Bjorn Schlier
Author: Lyn Ellett ORCID iD
Author: Elizabeth Thomson
Author: Brandon Gaudiano
Author: Katarina Krkovic
Author: Jessica Kingston

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