“…Depending on
sample size, analytic method used, and definitions of the symptoms/symptom
categories under investigation (e.g., broad versus strict), varying numbers of
symptom dimensions have been found across studies. In short, with respect to tic
symptoms as measured with the widely used Yale Global Tic Severity Scale (YGTSS)
(Leckman et al, 1989), between 2 and 5
factors were found (Alsobrook and Pauls, 2002;
Mathews et al, 2007; Robertson et al, 2008; de Haan et al, 2015), on the Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Symptom
Scale (YBOCS) (Goodman et al, 1989), between
3 and 5 factors were found (Baer et al, 1994;
McKay et al, 1995; Leckman et al, 1997; Katerberg et al, 2010), on the Connors Attention Deficit &
Hyperactivity Rating Scale (CAARS) (Conners et al,
1999) 2–3 factors (Conners et
al., 1999; Hardy et al, 2007),
and finally on the Autism spectrum Quotient (AQ) (Baron-Cohen et al, 2001) 5 factors have been identified, although
content of the symptom dimensions somewhat changed with re-analysis and abbreviation
of the scale (Baron-Cohen et al, 2001; Hoekstra et al, 2011). …”