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Investigating sensitivity through the lens of parents: validation of the parent-report version of the Highly Sensitive Child scale.

Alessandra SperatiMaria SpinelliMirco FasoloMassimiliano PastoreMichael PluessFrancesca Lionetti
Published in: Development and psychopathology (2022)
Children differ in their environmental sensitivity (ES), which can be measured observationally or by self-report questionnaire. A parent-report scale represents an important tool for investigating ES in younger children but has to be psychometrically robust and valid. In the current multistudy, we validated the parent-report version of the Highly Sensitive Child (HSC-PR) scale in Italian children, evaluating its factorial structure (Study 1, N = 1,857, 6.2 years, age range: 2.6-14 years) through a multigroup Confirmatory Factory Analysis in preschoolers ( n = 1,066, 4.2 years) and school-age children ( n = 791, 8.8 years). We then investigated the HSC-PR relationship with established temperament traits (Study 2, N = 327, 4.3 years), before exploring whether the scale moderates the effects of parenting stress on children's emotion regulation (Study 3, N = 112, 6.5 years). We found support for a bi-factor structure in both groups, though in preschoolers minor adaptations were suggested for one item. Importantly, the HSC-PR did not fully overlap with common temperament traits and moderated the effects of parenting stress on children emotion regulation. To conclude, the HSC-PR performs well and appears to capture ES in children.
Keyphrases
  • young adults
  • mental health
  • gene expression
  • dna methylation
  • high intensity
  • tandem mass spectrometry