Approximate Measurement Invariance of Willingness to Sacrifice for the Environment Across 30 Countries: The Importance of Prior Distributions and Their Visualization

Ingrid Arts*, Qixiang Fang, R. van de Schoot, Katharina Meitinger

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Nationwide opinions and international attitudes toward climate and environmental change are receiving increasing attention in both scientific and political communities. An often used way to measure these attitudes is by large-scale social surveys. However, the assumption for a valid country comparison, measurement invariance, is often not met, especially when a large number of countries are being compared. This makes a ranking of countries by the mean of a latent variable potentially unstable, and may lead to untrustworthy conclusions. Recently, more liberal approaches to assessing measurement invariance have been proposed, such as the alignment method in combination with Bayesian approximate measurement invariance. However, the effect of
prior variances on the assessment procedure and substantive conclusions is often not well understood. In this article,we tested formeasurement invariance of the latent variable “willingness to sacrifice for the environment” using Maximum Likelihood Multigroup Confirmatory Factor Analysis and Bayesian approximate measurement invariance, both with and without alignment optimization. For the Bayesian models, we used multiple priors to assess the impact on the rank order stability of countries. The results are visualized in such a way that the effect of different prior variances and models on group means and rankings becomes clear. We show that even when models appear to be a good fit to the data, there might still be an unwanted impact on the rank ordering of countries. From the results, we can conclude that people in Switzerland and South Korea are most motivated to sacrifice for the environment, while people in Latvia are less motivated to sacrifice for the environment.
Original languageEnglish
Article number624032
Pages (from-to)1-18
Number of pages18
JournalFrontiers in Psychology
Volume12
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 22 Jul 2021

Keywords

  • measurement invariance
  • visualization
  • Bayes
  • group ranking
  • MGCFA
  • prior sensitivity
  • Bayesian approximate measurement invariance (BAMI)

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