Kristen N. Jozkowski, PhD

William L. Yarber Endowed Professor in Sexual Health


Curriculum vitae


Academic Department

Applied Health Science, School of Public Health Indiana University, Bloomington



Testing the Internal Consent Scale for Measurement Invariance Across Women and Men


Journal article


Malachi Willis, K. Jozkowski, T. Marcantonio
Sex Roles, 2022

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APA   Click to copy
Willis, M., Jozkowski, K., & Marcantonio, T. (2022). Testing the Internal Consent Scale for Measurement Invariance Across Women and Men. Sex Roles.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Willis, Malachi, K. Jozkowski, and T. Marcantonio. “Testing the Internal Consent Scale for Measurement Invariance Across Women and Men.” Sex Roles (2022).


MLA   Click to copy
Willis, Malachi, et al. “Testing the Internal Consent Scale for Measurement Invariance Across Women and Men.” Sex Roles, 2022.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{malachi2022a,
  title = {Testing the Internal Consent Scale for Measurement Invariance Across Women and Men},
  year = {2022},
  journal = {Sex Roles},
  author = {Willis, Malachi and Jozkowski, K. and Marcantonio, T.}
}

Abstract

The Internal Consent Scale (ICS) was created to measure feelings associated with a person’s willingness to engage in partnered sexual activity. Although previous studies using the ICS have assessed gender differences, evidence has not been provided to suggest that the ICS functions similarly for women and men. Using data from an online cross-sectional survey of adults (N = 874; 53.1% women), we subjected the 25-item ICS to tests of measurement invariance across gender. We found that only partial measurement invariance was tenable, which indicated that direct comparisons across gender should be interpreted with caution when using the ICS. Therefore, we created a gender-invariant short form. In support of construct validity, we found that this 15-item ICS–Short Form demonstrated similar associations with measures of sexual consent communication as the full 25-item ICS. If researchers aim to compare women and men on internal sexual consent, we recommend using the 15-item ICS–Short Form. Cognitive interviews should be conducted to further understand how women and men might differentially interpret ICS items.

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