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Journal Article

Citation

Preuss UW, Rujescu D, Giegling I, Koller G, Bottlender M, Engel RR, Möller HJ, Soyka M. Fortschr. Neurol. Psychiatr. 2003; 71(10): 527-534.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2003, Georg Thieme Verlag)

DOI

10.1055/s-2003-42872

PMID

14551853

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Impulsive traits are key characteristics in a number of psychiatric disorders and are part of the normal behavior spectrum. The BIS-5 is an instrument developed to assess impulsivity. The aim of this study is to evaluate the BIS-5 in two German psychiatric inpatient samples and healthy controls proving the originally proposed four-factor structure as well as convergent and discriminate validity.
METHODS: 159 alcohol-dependent subjects and 77 suicidal inpatients were recruited in an University psychiatric hospital. 182 healthy subjects were recruited from town community. BIS-5 items were translated and back-translated. Principal component analysis with oblique rotation was conducted in the whole group. Furthermore, the discriminate and convergent validity of the BIS-5 was evaluated by correlation with other instruments measuring impulsive traits and comparing sample subgroups.
RESULTS: A two-factor solution could be identified in this German sample. Alcohol-dependent individuals showed significantly higher factor 1 values compared to suicidal patients. The group of suicidal patients had higher scores in factor 2 compared to controls. Factor 1 correlated most significantly with extraversion-related personality traits while factor 2 showed significant relationships with irritability and neuroticism.
CONCLUSIONS: A two-factor solution may be more appropriate in using the BIS-5 scale in German samples. These two factors might reflect different aspects of impulsive behavior and might be useful to characterize impulsive behavior in psychiatric and non-psychiatric samples.


Language: de

Keywords

Adult; Alcoholism; Extraversion, Psychological; Factor Analysis, Statistical; Female; Humans; Impulsive Behavior; Inpatients; Irritable Mood; Language; Male; Middle Aged; Neurotic Disorders; Personality Tests; Principal Component Analysis; Suicide, Attempted

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