“…Exploratory factor analyses have ranged from two (Buck, Healey, Gagen, Roberts, & Penn, 2016;Ziv, Leiser, & Levine, 2011) to three (Corbera, Wexler, Ikezawa, & Bell, 2013;Mancuso et al, 2011;Mehta et al, 2014) to four factors (Bell, Tsang, Greig, & Bryson, 2009;Stouten, Veling, Laan, van der Helm, & van der Gaag, 2017). Likewise, three confirmatory factor analyses examined models ranging from one to four factors and reported support for either one-factor (Browne et al, 2016), two-factor (Oliver et al, 2019), or four-factor models (Bell et al, 2009). This lack of replicability across studies likely reflects methodological factors such as the use of different social cognitive tasks, the frequent use of a small number of tasks focused on a relatively narrow range of social cognitive processes, and variability in clinical sample characteristics.…”