2022
DOI: 10.1007/s11199-022-01287-0
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Testing the Internal Consent Scale for Measurement Invariance Across Women and Men

Abstract: The Internal Consent Scale (ICS) was created to measure feelings associated with a person’s willingness to engage in partnered sexual activity. Although previous studies using the ICS have assessed gender differences, evidence has not been provided to suggest that the ICS functions similarly for women and men. Using data from an online cross-sectional survey of adults (N = 874; 53.1% women), we subjected the 25-item ICS to tests of measurement invariance across gender. We found that only partial measurement in… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…scalar invariance). This nested approach mirrors the strategy that Willis, Jozkowski, and Marcantonio (2022) recently used to examine the measurement invariance of the Internal Consent Scale. We perform this analysis to test the scale's measurement invariance with respect to sex (male vs. female), race (White vs. Non-White), and education (college graduate vs. not).…”
Section: Analysis Planmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…scalar invariance). This nested approach mirrors the strategy that Willis, Jozkowski, and Marcantonio (2022) recently used to examine the measurement invariance of the Internal Consent Scale. We perform this analysis to test the scale's measurement invariance with respect to sex (male vs. female), race (White vs. Non-White), and education (college graduate vs. not).…”
Section: Analysis Planmentioning
confidence: 99%