About this Research Topic
Clinical Psychometrics can be considered as an essential tool in many fields of research related to psychological and psychiatric interventions: for example, it is useful for diagnostic assessment (in various fields, including clinical and forensic areas), for the design and evaluation of specific psychological and pharmacological treatments. Therefore, Clinical Psychometrics is an applied discipline using psychometric tools to develop evidence-based type procedures relating to the understanding and improvement of the psychological conditions of individuals.
This Research Topic on “Clinical Psychometrics” is interested in several aspects of measurement of psychological variables, focusing on the two fundamental paradigmatic aspects of the discipline, the Classical Test Theory and the Item Response Theory.
This Research Topic seeks to stimulate a scientific debate between psychotherapists and psychometricians in this area. It could have applicative fallouts, such as designing trans-cultural studies in order to: 1) investigate the invariance of new instruments for measuring clinical variables; 2) test the invariance of existing instruments used in clinical research; 3) develop more refined measure instruments for the evaluation of clinical dimensions, similarly to work conducted by the Obsessive Compulsive Cognitions Working Group in identifying domains considered central to OCD and developing the 87-item Obsessive Beliefs Questionnaire; 4) evaluate therapeutic outcomes and processes (such as, states stress, psychological distress, psychological adjustment to illness, health-related quality of life, mood disorders, sexual functioning, etc.).
The goal of this Research Topic is to disseminate a culture of integration between “psychometric model” and “clinical model”, promoting the scientific debate about the deepening of the existing methods and/or the proposal of new methods capable of combining clinical significance with quantitative rigor. Such a debate will focus on questions such as: Is it possible to build measuring instruments with psychometric validity and reliability, as well as the sensitivity of change detection? Is it also possible to apply the concept of incremental validity to the inclusion of items in the construction of a rating scale? Is it possible to make the total score of a clinical scale as determined not only by the number of present symptoms, but also by their quality and intensity? To date, these issues raised by researchers committed to this discipline do not have satisfactory answers.
This Research Topic welcomes all types of articles, with the exception of case reports. We are particularly interested in:
1. Systematic reviews shedding new lights on the psychometric properties of the most used psychological measures in clinical psychology, neuroscience, psychiatry, psychosomatics, etc.;
2. Guidelines and suggestions on the correct use and gold standards in psychological assessment in the form of research studies and brief reports on the development of new measures and adaptation of existing ones.
Especially welcomed are those studies focusing on the development of new MMPI-2 scales, studies on neuropsychological instruments, studies assessing factor invariance of existing measures, and studies investigating psychometric properties of existing measures and new ones in minorities and special populations such as LGBT, adolescents, and older adults.
Keywords: psychological testing, psychometrics, clinical assessment, quantitative measurement, psychological assessment
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.