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Applying and Interpreting Mixture Distribution Latent State-Trait Models
Authors:Kaylee Litson  Carly Thornhill  Christian Geiser  G Leonard Burns  Mateu Servera
Institution:1. Utah State Universitykaylee.litson@gmail.com;3. Utah State University;4. Washington State University;5. University of the Balearic Islands
Abstract:Latent state-trait (LST) models are commonly applied to determine the extent to which observed variables reflect trait-like versus state-like constructs. Mixture distribution LST (M-LST) models relax the assumption of population homogeneity made in traditional LST models, allowing researchers to identify subpopulations (latent classes) with differing trait- and state-like attributes. Applications of M-LST models are scarce, presumably because of the analysis complexity. We present a step-by-step tutorial for evaluating M-LST models based on an application to mother, father, and teacher reports of children’s inattention (n = 811). In the application, we found three latent classes for mother and father reports and four classes for teacher reports. All reporter solutions contained classes with very low, low, and moderate levels of inattention. The teacher solution also contained a class with high inattention. Comparable mother and father (but not teacher) classes exhibited similar levels of trait and state variance.
Keywords:Latent state-trait  mixture distribution modeling  consistency  occasion-specificity  longitudinal modeling  latent classes
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