8 results on '"Condon, David M."'
Search Results
2. Sense of direction: General factor saturation and associations with the Big-Five traits.
- Author
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Condon, David M., Wilt, Joshua, Cohen, Cheryl Ann, Revelle, William, Hegarty, Mary, and Uttal, David H.
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SENSES , *PSYCHOMETRICS , *SELF-evaluation , *INDIVIDUAL differences , *PERSONALITY , *INTELLECT , *CONSCIENTIOUSNESS , *SENSE of direction - Abstract
The ability to locate and orient ourselves with respect to environmental space is known as sense of direction (“SOD”). While there is considerable evidence for the predictive utility of self-report measures of this psychological construct, relatively little research has investigated the psychometric properties of the self-report scale by which it is most commonly measured – the Santa Barbara Sense of Direction scale (SBSOD, Hegarty et al., 2002) – or the broader personality correlates. The present study evaluated the factor structure of the SBSOD following administration to 12,155 individuals and situated it among prominent sources of individual differences, specifically the Big Five personality traits and intelligence. Findings suggest that the SBSOD scale has relatively high general factor saturation, and that a considerable portion of the variance in SBSOD scores is explained by other personality traits, including Conscientiousness ( r = 0.33), Intellect ( r = 0.27), Emotional Stability ( r = 0.26), and Extraversion ( r = 0.23). Cognitive ability was less highly correlated with SBSOD scores when measured at the level of general intelligence ( r = 0.11) and in terms of mental rotation ability ( r = .07). Recommendations are given for revision of the SBSOD scale based on item-level analyses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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3. The international cognitive ability resource: Development and initial validation of a public-domain measure.
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Condon, David M. and Revelle, William
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COGNITIVE ability , *DEVELOPMENTAL psychology , *PUBLIC domain , *CONTROL (Psychology) , *STATISTICAL correlation - Abstract
Abstract: For all of its versatility and sophistication, the extant toolkit of cognitive ability measures lacks a public-domain method for large-scale, remote data collection. While the lack of copyright protection for such a measure poses a theoretical threat to test validity, the effective magnitude of this threat is unknown and can be offset by the use of modern test-development techniques. To the extent that validity can be maintained, the benefits of a public-domain resource are considerable for researchers, including: cost savings; greater control over test content; and the potential for more nuanced understanding of the correlational structure between constructs. The International Cognitive Ability Resource was developed to evaluate the prospects for such a public-domain measure and the psychometric properties of the first four item types were evaluated based on administrations to both an offline university sample and a large online sample. Concurrent and discriminative validity analyses suggest that the public-domain status of these item types did not compromise their validity despite administration to 97,000 participants. Further development and validation of extant and additional item types are recommended. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2014
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4. Psychosocial factors associated with preventive pediatric care during the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Weston, Sara J., Condon, David M., and Fisher, Philip A.
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INCOME , *INFLUENZA vaccines , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *HEALTH insurance , *MOTHERS , *SOCIAL factors , *FAMILIES , *EVALUATION of medical care , *PEDIATRICS , *MEDICAL appointments , *PSYCHOLOGY of parents , *COVID-19 pandemic , *PREVENTIVE health services - Abstract
Identifying the factors that predict non-adherence to recommended preventive pediatric care is necessary for the development of successful interventions to improve compliance. Given the substantial decline in well-child visits and influenza vaccinations, we sought to examine sociodemographic (i.e., parent age, education, employment status, child age, insurance coverage, household size, race and ethnicity, income, COVID-19 incidence in state) and psychosocial (i.e., child temperament, parent mental health, parent personality traits) factors associated with preventative pediatric care (well-child visits, influenza vaccines) during the COVID-19 pandemic. As part of a larger, ongoing study, 1875 parents (96% mothers, 65% age 35 or younger, 58% with a college degree) reported whether they had missed any recommended or scheduled well-child visits since the pandemic and whether they had vaccinated their child against the flu. Using data collected during fall 2020, we examine differences in these health outcomes across social/demographic factors and psychological profiles. In addition, we use lasso logistic regression models to (1) estimate the accuracy with which we can predict adherence from these characteristics and (2) identify factors most strongly, independently associated with adherence. Parent psychological factors were associated with outcomes above and beyond known demographic and social factors. For example, parent industriousness and orderliness were associated with greater likelihoods of attending well-child visits and vaccinating children, while parent conservatism and creativity were associated with lower rates. We also replicate prior work documenting that health insurance, income, and household size are major factors in receiving adequate pediatric care. Adherence to preventive pediatric care varies as a function of psychological factors, suggesting that the current system of pediatric care favors some psychological profiles over others. However, the specific traits associated with non-adherence point to potentially fruitful interventions, specifically around increasing functional proximity. • Socio-demographic and parent personality/mental-health linked to pediatric care. • Parent industry and conservatism linked to well-child visits and flu vaccines. • Intervention design and targeting could aid adherence to pediatric care schedule. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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5. Looking for Flynn effects in a recent online U.S. adult sample: Examining shifts within the SAPA Project.
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Dworak, Elizabeth M., Revelle, William, and Condon, David M.
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SYNTHETIC apertures , *COGNITIVE ability , *PERSONALITY assessment , *MULTIPLE intelligences , *COGNITION , *TEENAGE girls - Abstract
Compared to European countries, research is limited regarding if the Flynn effect, or its reversal, is a current phenomenon in the United States. Though recent research on the United States suggests that a Flynn effect could still be present, or partially present, among child and adolescent samples, few studies have explored differences of cognitive ability scores among US adults. Thirteen years of cross-sectional data from a subsample of adults (n = 394,378) were obtained from the Synthetic Aperture Personality Assessment Project (SAPA Project) to examine if cognitive ability scores changed within the United States from 2006 to 2018. Responses to an overlapping set of 35 (collected 2006–2018) and 60 (collected 2011–2018) items from the open-source multiple choice intelligence assessment International Cognitive Ability Resource (ICAR) were used to examine the trends in standardized average composite cognitive ability scores and domain scores of matrix reasoning, letter and number series, verbal reasoning, and three-dimensional rotation. Composite ability scores from 35 items and domain scores (matrix reasoning; letter and number series) showed a pattern consistent with a reversed Flynn effect from 2006 to 2018 when stratified across age, education, or gender. Slopes for verbal reasoning scores, however, failed to meet or exceed an annual threshold of |0.02| SD. A reversed Flynn effect was also present from 2011 to 2018 for composite ability scores from 60 items across age, education, and gender. Despite declining scores across age and demographics in other domains of cognitive ability, three-dimensional rotation scores showed evidence of a Flynn effect with the largest slopes occurring across age stratified regressions. • A reverse Flynn effect was found for composite ability scores with large US adult sample from 2006 to 2018 and 2011 to 2018. • Domain scores of matrix reasoning, letter and number series, verbal reasoning showed evidence of declining scores. • Three-dimensional rotation scores generally increased from 2011 to 2018. • Differences in ability scores were present regardless of age, education, or gender. • The steepest slopes occurred for ages 18–22 and lower levels of education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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6. Transition metal derivatives of arenediazonium ions XI. Reactions of some molybdenum(0) arenediazo complexes with halogens, tin(IV) halides, mercury (II) halides and related reagents
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Lalor, Fergus J., Deane, Michael E., and Condon, David M.
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- 1983
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7. Exploring the persome: The power of the item in understanding personality structure.
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Revelle, William, Dworak, Elizabeth M., and Condon, David M.
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MISSING data (Statistics) , *PERSONALITY assessment , *SYNTHETIC apertures , *COVARIANCE matrices , *PERSONALITY - Abstract
We discuss methods of data collection and analysis that emphasize the power of individual personality items for predicting real world criteria (e.g., smoking, exercise, self-rated health). These methods are borrowed by analogy from radio astronomy and human genomics. Synthetic Aperture Personality Assessment (SAPA) applies a matrix sampling procedure that synthesizes very large covariance matrices through the application of massively missing at random data collection. These large covariance matrices can be applied, in turn, in Persome Wide Association Studies (PWAS) to form personality prediction scores for particular criteria. We use two open source data sets (N=4,000 and 126,884 with 135 and 696 items respectively) for demonstrations of both of these procedures. We compare these procedures to the more traditional use of "Big 5" or a larger set of narrower factors (the "little 27"). We argue that there is more information at the item level than is used when aggregating items to form factorially derived scales. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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8. Using the International Cognitive Ability Resource as an open source tool to explore individual differences in cognitive ability.
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Dworak, Elizabeth M., Revelle, William, Doebler, Philip, and Condon, David M.
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COGNITIVE ability , *INDIVIDUAL differences - Abstract
Although the measurement of intelligence is important, researchers sometimes avoid using them in their studies due to their history, cost, or burden on the researcher. To encourage the use of cognitive ability items in research, we discuss the development and validation of the International Cognitive Ability Resource (ICAR), a growing set of items from 19 different subdomains. We consider how these items might benefit open science in contrast to more established proprietary measures. A short summary of how these items have been used in outside studies is provided in addition to ways we would love to see the use of public-domain cognitive ability items grow. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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