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The Effect of Noninvariance on the Estimation of the Mediated Effect in the Two-Wave Mediation Model.

The two-wave mediation model is the most suitable model for examining mediation effects in a randomized intervention and includes measures taken at pretest and posttest. When using self-report measures, the meaning of responses may change for the treatment group over the course of the intervention and result in noninvariance across groups at posttest, a phenomenon referred to as response shift . We investigate how the mediated effect would be impacted by noninvariance when using sum scores (i.e., assuming invariance). In a Monte Carlo simulation study, the magnitude and proportion of items that had noninvariant intercepts, the direction of noninvariance, number of items, effect size of the mediated effect and sample size were varied. Results showed increased Type I and Type II errors due to a biased estimate of the intervention effect on the mediator resulting from noninvariance. Thus, measurement noninvariance could lead to erroneous conclusions about the process underlying the intervention.

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