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The Early Social Cognition Inventory (ESCI): An examination of its psychometric properties from birth to 47 months

Title: The Early Social Cognition Inventory (ESCI): An examination of its psychometric properties from birth to 47 months
Authors: Hoicka, Elena; Soy Telli, Burcu; Prouten, Eloise; Leckie, George; Browne, William J; Nurmsoo, Erika; Gattis, Merideth
Contributors: Nevşehir Hacı Bektaş Veli Üniversitesi/fen-edebiyat fakültesi/psikoloji bölümü/gelişim psikolojisi anabilim dalı; 337143
Publisher Information: Springer
Publication Year: 2021
Collection: Nevsehir Haci Bektas Veli University Institutional Repository (DSpace@NEVU)
Subject Terms: Social cognition; Theory of Mind; Survey development; Infants; Toddlers; Preschoolers
Description: Elena Hoicka, Burcu Soy Telli, and Eloise Prouten designed the research, and collected and coded the data. Elena Hoicka was the primary author, and analysed the data. Burcu Soy Telli wrote parts of the Method section, and Merideth Gattis wrote parts of the Introduction. Burcu Soy Telli, Merideth Gattis, George Leckie, William J. Browne, and Erika Nurmsoo edited and gave feedback on the manuscript, both in terms of content and analyses. ; Social cognition refers to a broad range of cognitive processes and skills that allow individuals to interact with and understand others, including a variety of skills from infancy through preschool and beyond, e.g., joint attention, imitation, and belief understanding. However, no measures examine socio-cognitive development from birth through preschool. Current test batteries and parent-report measures focus either on infancy, or toddlerhood through preschool (and beyond). We report six studies in which we developed and tested a new 21-item parent-report measure of social cognition targeting 0–47 months: the Early Social Cognition Inventory (ESCI). Study 1 (N = 295) revealed the ESCI has excellent internal reliability, and a two-factor structure capturing social cognition and age. Study 2 (N = 605) also showed excellent internal reliability and confirmed the two-factor structure. Study 3 (N = 84) found a medium correlation between the ESCI and a researcher-administered social cognition task battery. Study 4 (N = 46) found strong 1-month test–retest reliability. Study 5 found longitudinal stability (6 months: N = 140; 12 months: N = 39), and inter-observer reliability between parents (N = 36) was good, and children’s scores increased significantly over 6 and 12 months. Study 6 showed the ESCI was internally reliable within countries (Australia, Canada, United Kingdom, United States, Trinidad and Tobago); parent ethnicity; parent education; and age groups from 4–39 months. ESCI scores positively correlated with household income (UK); children with siblings had higher scores; and ...
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
Language: English
Relation: Behavior Research Method; https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11787/5179
Availability: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11787/5179
Rights: info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Accession Number: edsbas.5B5346EB
Database: BASE