2 nd Order CFA Hierarchical Latent Models Kline Chapter 9 Beaujean Chapter 9.

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Transcript of 2 nd Order CFA Hierarchical Latent Models Kline Chapter 9 Beaujean Chapter 9.

2nd Order CFAHierarchical Latent Models

Kline Chapter 9Beaujean Chapter 9

Naming

• Hierarchical:– Structured into an order or rank

• Higher-order:– Describes when latent variables are structured so

that latents influence other latents into levels• Bi-factor– Generally used to describe a CFA with two sets of

latent variables (not hierarchical)

Hierarchical Models

• The idea of a higher order model is:– You have some latent variables that are measured

by the observed variables– A portion of the variance in the latent variables

can be explained by a second (set) of latent variables

Hierarchical Models

• Therefore, we are switching out the covariances between factors and using another latent to explain them.

Hierarchical Models

• When are these used?– When there are multiple latent variables that

covary with each other (and a lot)– A second set of latents explains that covariance

Hierarchical Models

• The covariance of the first order is accounted for by the second order plus a specific factor– Specific factors are error that is not explained by

the second order latents. • The higher order is thought to indirectly

influence the manifest variables through the first order.

Identification

• Remember that each portion of the model has to be identified.– The section with each latent variable has to be

identified (so you need at least one loading or LV set to 1).

– The section with the latents has to be identified

Identification

• You can do get over identification in a couple of ways:– Set some of the loadings in the upper portion of

the model to be equal (give them the same name)– You can set the variance in the upper latent to be

1– You can set some of the error variances of the

latents in the lower portion to be equal

Bi-Factor Models

• Special type of model with two sets of latents, but they are not hierarchically structured.

• Best used when:– General factor that accounts for variance in the

manifest variables– Domain specific areas that are thought to

influence the manifest variables

Bi-Factor Models

• One thing to note is that the latent variables are left uncorrelated in this type of model. – This structure represents the domain specific part

of the interpretation.

Model Differences

• Differences between bi-factor and hierarchical:– In hierarchical models, the second order

influences the first order, while the two sets of latents in bi-factors are uncorrelated.

– What does that allow you to test differently?

Model Differences

• Advantages:– Allows you to see how the first order LV influence

the manifest variables separately from the other LV.

– After accounting for the general LV, are the domain specific items still accounting for variance?• You can compare models with and without the domain

specific areas.

Book Examples

• First, let’s fit a first order model for the WISC– If the first order model doesn’t work, then a

second order isn’t appropriate– You should also check out the

correlations/covariances between factors to make sure that they are even related.

Book Examples

• In the first order model, we find that the correlations are pretty high.– That’s a good sign that maybe a second order

model is appropriate.– (or that factors should be collapsed, they are not

distinct).

Book Examples

• Now, let’s try a second order model. – Set the variance of the latent to 1– g=~ NA*gf + gc + gsm + gs – g~~ 1*g

Set a path to 1g=~ gf + gc + gsm + gs

Book Examples

• Bi-factor model– What does this code do?– gf =~ a*Matrix.Reasoning + a*Picture.Concepts – gsm =~ b*Digit.Span + b*Letter.Number– gs =~ c*Coding + c*Symbol.Searc

Book Examples

• Bi-factor model– What does this code do?– orthogonal=TRUE• Forces the latents to be uncorrelated.