McDonald has proposed coefficient omega as an estimate of the general factor saturation of a test. One way to find omega is to do a factor analysis of the original data set, rotate the factors obliquely, do a Schmid Leiman transformation, and then find omega. This function estimates omega as suggested by McDonald by using hierarchical factor analysis (following Jensen). A related option is to define the model using omega and then perform a confirmatory (bi-factor) analysis using the sem or lavaan packages. This is done by omegaSem and omegaFromSem. omegaFromSem will convert appropriate sem/lavaan objects to find omega. Yet another option is to do the direct Schmid-Leiman of Waller.ing
omega(m,nfactors=3,fm="minres",n.iter=1,p=.05,poly=FALSE,key=NULL,
flip=TRUE,digits=2, title="Omega",sl=TRUE,labels=NULL,
plot=TRUE,n.obs=NA,rotate="oblimin",Phi=NULL,option="equal",covar=FALSE, ...)
omegaSem(m,nfactors=3,fm="minres",key=NULL,flip=TRUE,digits=2,title="Omega",
sl=TRUE,labels=NULL, plot=TRUE,n.obs=NA,rotate="oblimin",
Phi = NULL, option="equal",lavaan=TRUE,...)
omegah(m,nfactors=3,fm="minres",key=NULL,flip=TRUE,
digits=2,title="Omega",sl=TRUE,labels=NULL, plot=TRUE,
n.obs=NA,rotate="oblimin",Phi = NULL,option="equal",covar=FALSE,...) omegaFromSem(fit,m=NULL,flip=TRUE,plot=TRUE)
omegaDirect(m,nfactors=3,fm="minres",rotate="oblimin",cut=.3,
plot=TRUE,main="Direct Schmid Leiman")
directSl(m,nfactors=3,fm="minres",rotate="oblimin",cut=.3)
A correlation matrix, or a data.frame/matrix of data, or (if Phi) is specified, an oblique factor pattern matrix
Number of factors believed to be group factors
How many replications to do in omega for bootstrapped estimates
factor method (the default is minres) fm="pa" for principal axes, fm="minres" for a minimum residual (OLS) solution, fm="pc" for principal components (see note), or fm="ml" for maximum likelihood.
should the correlation matrix be found using polychoric/tetrachoric or normal Pearson correlations
a vector of +/- 1s to specify the direction of scoring of items. The default is to assume all items are positively keyed, but if some items are reversed scored, then key should be specified.
If flip is TRUE, then items are automatically flipped to have positive correlations on the general factor. Items that have been reversed are shown with a - sign.
probability of two tailed conference boundaries
if specified, round the output to digits
Title for this analysis
main for this analysis (directSl)
Loadings greater than cut are used in directSl
If plotting the results, should the Schmid Leiman solution be shown or should the hierarchical solution be shown? (default sl=TRUE)
If plotting, what labels should be applied to the variables? If not specified, will default to the column names.
plot=TRUE (default) calls omega.diagram, plot =FALSE does not. If Rgraphviz is available, then omega.graph
may be used separately.
Number of observations - used for goodness of fit statistic
What rotation to apply? The default is oblimin, the alternatives include simplimax, Promax, cluster and target. target will rotate to an optional keys matrix (See target.rot
)
If specified, then omega is found from the pattern matrix (m) and the factor intercorrelation matrix (Phi).
In the two factor case (not recommended), should the loadings be equal, emphasize the first factor, or emphasize the second factor. See in particular the option parameter in schmid
for treating the case of two group factors.
defaults to FALSE and the correlation matrix is found (standardized variables.) If TRUE, the do the calculations on the unstandardized variables and use covariances.
if FALSE, will use John Fox's sem package to do the omegaSem. If TRUE, will use Yves Rosseel's lavaan package.
The fitted object from lavaan or sem. For lavaan, this includes the correlation matrix and the variable names and thus m needs not be specified.
Allows additional parameters to be passed through to the factor routines.
The \(\omega_h\) coefficient
The limit of \(\omega_h\) as the test becomes infinitly large
The \(omega_t\) coefficient
Cronbach's \(\alpha\)
The Schmid Leiman transformed factor matrix and associated matrices
The g factor loadings as well as the residualized factors
Varimax rotated solution of the original factors
The oblimin or promax transformed factors
the correlation matrix of the oblique factors
The loadings on the higher order, g, factor of the oblimin factors
A vector of -1 or 1 showing which direction the items were scored.
a list of two elements, one suitable to give to the sem function for structure equation models, the other, to give to the lavaan package.
The output from a sem analysis
The summary statistics for the omega total, omega hierarchical (general) and omega within each group.
Factor score estimates are found for the Schmid-Leiman solution. To get scores for the hierarchical model see the note.
various fit statistics, see output
is an object that contains the fits for the OmegaSem output.
The direct SL rotated object (from omegaDirect)
The original, unrotated solution from omegaDirect
The cluster based target for rotation in directSl
``Many scales are assumed by their developers and users to be primarily a measure of one latent variable. When it is also assumed that the scale conforms to the effect indicator model of measurement (as is almost always the case in psychological assessment), it is important to support such an interpretation with evidence regarding the internal structure of that scale. In particular, it is important to examine two related properties pertaining to the internal structure of such a scale. The first property relates to whether all the indicators forming the scale measure a latent variable in common.
The second internal structural property pertains to the proportion of variance in the scale scores (derived from summing or averaging the indicators) accounted for by this latent variable that is common to all the indicators (Cronbach, 1951; McDonald, 1999; Revelle, 1979). That is, if an effect indicator scale is primarily a measure of one latent variable common to all the indicators forming the scale, then that latent variable should account for the majority of the variance in the scale scores. Put differently, this variance ratio provides important information about the sampling fluctuations when estimating individuals' standing on a latent variable common to all the indicators arising from the sampling of indicators (i.e., when dealing with either Type 2 or Type 12 sampling, to use the terminology of Lord, 1956). That is, this variance proportion can be interpreted as the square of the correlation between the scale score and the latent variable common to all the indicators in the infinite universe of indicators of which the scale indicators are a subset. Put yet another way, this variance ratio is important both as reliability and a validity coefficient. This is a reliability issue as the larger this variance ratio is, the more accurately one can predict an individual's relative standing on the latent variable common to all the scale's indicators based on his or her observed scale score. At the same time, this variance ratio also bears on the construct validity of the scale given that construct validity encompasses the internal structure of a scale." (Zinbarg, Yovel, Revelle, and McDonald, 2006).
McDonald has proposed coefficient omega_hierarchical (\(\omega_h\)) as an estimate of the general factor saturation of a test. Zinbarg, Revelle, Yovel and Li (2005) https://personality-project.org/revelle/publications/zinbarg.revelle.pmet.05.pdf compare McDonald's \(\omega_h\) to Cronbach's \(\alpha\) and Revelle's \(\beta\). They conclude that \(\omega_h\) is the best estimate. (See also Zinbarg et al., 2006 and Revelle and Zinbarg (2009)).
One way to find \(\omega_h\) is to do a factor analysis of the original data set, rotate the factors obliquely, factor that correlation matrix, do a Schmid-Leiman (schmid) transformation to find general factor loadings, and then find \(\omega_h\). Here we present code to do that.
\(\omega_h\) differs as a function of how the factors are estimated. Four options are available, three use the fa
function but with different factoring methods: the default does a minres factor solution, fm="pa" does a principle axes factor analysis fm="mle" does a maximum likelihood solution; fm="pc" does a principal components analysis using (principal
).
For ability items, it is typically the case that all items will have positive loadings on the general factor. However, for non-cognitive items it is frequently the case that some items are to be scored positively, and some negatively. Although probably better to specify which directions the items are to be scored by specifying a key vector, if flip =TRUE (the default), items will be reversed so that they have positive loadings on the general factor. The keys are reported so that scores can be found using the scoreItems
function. Arbitrarily reversing items this way can overestimate the general factor. (See the example with a simulated circumplex).
\(\beta\), an alternative to \(\omega_h\), is defined as the worst split half
reliability (Revelle, 1979). It can be estimated by using ICLUST
(a
hierarchical clustering algorithm originally developed for main frames and written in
Fortran and that is now part of the psych package. (For a very complimentary review of
why the ICLUST algorithm is useful in scale construction, see Cooksey and Soutar, 2005)).
The omega
function uses exploratory factor analysis to estimate the \(\omega_h\) coefficient. It is important to remember that ``A recommendation that should be heeded, regardless of the method chosen to estimate \(\omega_h\), is to always examine the pattern of the estimated general factor loadings prior to estimating \(\omega_h\). Such an examination constitutes an informal test of the assumption that there is a latent variable common to all of the scale's indicators that can be conducted even in the context of EFA. If the loadings were salient for only a relatively small subset of the indicators, this would suggest that there is no true general factor underlying the covariance matrix. Just such an informal assumption test would have afforded a great deal of protection against the possibility of misinterpreting the misleading \(\omega_h\) estimates occasionally produced in the simulations reported here." (Zinbarg et al., 2006, p 137).
A simple demonstration of the problem of an omega estimate reflecting just one of two group factors can be found in the last example.
Diagnostic statistics that reflect the quality of the omega solution include a comparison of the relative size of the g factor eigen value to the other eigen values, the percent of the common variance for each item that is general factor variance (p2), the mean of p2, and the standard deviation of p2. Further diagnostics can be done by describing (describe) the $schmid$sl results.
Although omega_h is uniquely defined only for cases where 3 or more subfactors are extracted, it is sometimes desired to have a two factor solution. By default this is done by forcing the schmid extraction to treat the two subfactors as having equal loadings.
There are three possible options for this condition: setting the general factor loadings between the two lower order factors to be "equal" which will be the sqrt(oblique correlations between the factors) or to "first" or "second" in which case the general factor is equated with either the first or second group factor. A message is issued suggesting that the model is not really well defined. This solution discussed in Zinbarg et al., 2007. To do this in omega, add the option="first" or option="second" to the call.
Although obviously not meaningful for a 1 factor solution, it is of course possible to find the sum of the loadings on the first (and only) factor, square them, and compare them to the overall matrix variance. This is done, with appropriate complaints.
In addition to \(\omega_h\), another of McDonald's coefficients is \(\omega_t\). This is an estimate of the total reliability of a test.
McDonald's \(\omega_t\), which is similar to Guttman's \(\lambda_6\), guttman
but uses the estimates of uniqueness (\(u^2\)) from factor analysis to find \(e_j^2\). This is based on a decomposition of the variance of a test score, \(V_x\) into four parts: that due to a general factor, \(\vec{g}\), that due to a set of group factors, \(\vec{f}\), (factors common to some but not all of the items), specific factors, \(\vec{s}\) unique to each item, and \(\vec{e}\), random error. (Because specific variance can not be distinguished from random error unless the test is given at least twice, some combine these both into error).
Letting \(\vec{x} = \vec{cg} + \vec{Af} + \vec {Ds} + \vec{e}\) then the communality of item\(_j\), based upon general as well as group factors, \(h_j^2 = c_j^2 + \sum{f_{ij}^2}\) and the unique variance for the item \(u_j^2 = \sigma_j^2 (1-h_j^2)\) may be used to estimate the test reliability. That is, if \(h_j^2\) is the communality of item\(_j\), based upon general as well as group factors, then for standardized items, \(e_j^2 = 1 - h_j^2\) and $$ \omega_t = \frac{\vec{1}\vec{cc'}\vec{1} + \vec{1}\vec{AA'}\vec{1}'}{V_x} = 1 - \frac{\sum(1-h_j^2)}{V_x} = 1 - \frac{\sum u^2}{V_x}$$
Because \(h_j^2 \geq r_{smc}^2\), \(\omega_t \geq \lambda_6\).
It is important to distinguish here between the two \(\omega\) coefficients of McDonald, 1978 and Equation 6.20a of McDonald, 1999, \(\omega_t\) and \(\omega_h\). While the former is based upon the sum of squared loadings on all the factors, the latter is based upon the sum of the squared loadings on the general factor. $$\omega_h = \frac{ \vec{1}\vec{cc'}\vec{1}}{V_x}$$
Another estimate reported is the omega for an infinite length test with a structure similar to the observed test (omega H asymptotic). This is found by $$\omega_{limit} = \frac{\vec{1}\vec{cc'}\vec{1}}{\vec{1}\vec{cc'}\vec{1} + \vec{1}\vec{AA'}\vec{1}'}$$.
Following suggestions by Steve Reise, the Explained Common Variance (ECV) is also reported. This is the ratio of the general factor eigen value to the sum of all of the eigen values. As such, it is a better indicator of unidimensionality than of the amount of test variance accounted for by a general factor.
The input to omega may be a correlation matrix or a raw data matrix, or a factor pattern matrix with the factor intercorrelations (Phi) matrix.
omega
is an exploratory factor analysis function that uses a Schmid-Leiman transformation. omegaSem
first calls omega
and then takes the Schmid-Leiman solution, converts this to a confirmatory sem model and then calls the sem package to conduct a confirmatory model. \(\omega_h\) is then calculated from the CFA output. Although for well behaved problems, the efa and cfa solutions will be practically identical, the CFA solution will not always agree with the EFA solution. In particular, the estimated \(R^2\) will sometimes exceed 1. (An example of this is the Harman 24 cognitive abilities problem.)
In addition, not all EFA solutions will produce workable CFA solutions. Model misspecifications will lead to very strange CFA estimates.
It is also possible to give omega
a factor pattern matrix and the associated factor intercorrelation. In this case, the analysis will be done on these matrices. This is particularly useful if one is not satisfied with the exploratory EFA solutions and rotation options and somehow comes up with an alternative. (For instance, one might want to do a EFA using fm='pa' with a Kaiser normalized Promax solution with a specified m value.)
omegaFromSem
takes the output from a sem model and uses it to find
\(\omega_h\). The estimate of factor indeterminacy, found by the multiple \(R^2\) of the variables with the factors, will not match that found by the EFA model. In particular, the estimated \(R^2\) will sometimes exceed 1. (An example of this is the Harman 24 cognitive abilities problem.)
The notion of omega may be applied to the individual factors as well as the overall test. A typical use of omega is to identify subscales of a total inventory. Some of that variability is due to the general factor of the inventory, some to the specific variance of each subscale. Thus, we can find a number of different omega estimates: what percentage of the variance of the items identified with each subfactor is actually due to the general factor. What variance is common but unique to the subfactor, and what is the total reliable variance of each subfactor. These results are reported in omega.group object and in the last few lines of the normal output.
Finally, and still be tested, is omegaDirect
adapted from Waller (2017). This is a direct rotation to a Schmid-Leiman like solution without doing the hierarchical factoring (directSl
). This rotation is then interpreted in terms of omega. It is included here to allow for comparisons with the alternative procedures omega
and omegaSem
. Preliminary analyses suggests that it produces inappropriate solutions for the case where there is no general factor.
Moral: Finding omega_h is tricky and one should probably compare omega
, omegaSem
, omegaDirect
and even iclust
solutions to understand the differences.
The summary of the omega object is a reduced set of the most useful output.
The various objects returned from omega include:
https://personality-project.org/r/r.omega.html
Revelle, William. (in prep) An introduction to psychometric theory with applications in R. Springer. Working draft available at https://personality-project.org/r/book/
Revelle, W. (1979). Hierarchical cluster analysis and the internal structure of tests. Multivariate Behavioral Research, 14, 57-74. (https://personality-project.org/revelle/publications/iclust.pdf)
Revelle, W. and Zinbarg, R. E. (2009) Coefficients alpha, beta, omega and the glb: comments on Sijtsma. Psychometrika, 74, 1, 145-154. (https://personality-project.org/revelle/publications/rz09.pdf
Waller, N. G. (2017) Direct Schmid-Leiman Transformations and Rank-Deficient Loadings Matrices. Psychometrika. DOI: 10.1007/s11336-017-9599-0
Zinbarg, R.E., Revelle, W., Yovel, I., & Li. W. (2005). Cronbach's Alpha, Revelle's Beta, McDonald's Omega: Their relations with each and two alternative conceptualizations of reliability. Psychometrika. 70, 123-133. https://personality-project.org/revelle/publications/zinbarg.revelle.pmet.05.pdf
Zinbarg, R., Yovel, I. & Revelle, W. (2007). Estimating omega for structures containing two group factors: Perils and prospects. Applied Psychological Measurement. 31 (2), 135-157.
Zinbarg, R., Yovel, I., Revelle, W. & McDonald, R. (2006). Estimating generalizability to a universe of indicators that all have one attribute in common: A comparison of estimators for omega. Applied Psychological Measurement, 30, 121-144. DOI: 10.1177/0146621605278814 https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0146621605278814
omega.graph
for a dot code graphic. ICLUST
, ICLUST.diagram
for hierarchical cluster analysis, VSS
, nfactors
, fa.parallel
for alternative ways of estimating the appropriate number of factors. schmid
for the decomposition used in omega.
make.hierarchical
to simulate a hierarchical model.
fa.multi
for hierarchical factor analysis with an arbitrary number of 2nd order factors.
# NOT RUN {
test.data <- Harman74.cor$cov
# if(!require(GPArotation)) {message("Omega requires GPA rotation" )} else {
my.omega <- omega(test.data)
print(my.omega,digits=2)
#}
#create 9 variables with a hierarchical structure
v9 <- sim.hierarchical()
#with correlations of
round(v9,2)
#find omega
v9.omega <- omega(v9,digits=2)
v9.omega
#create 8 items with a two factor solution, showing the use of the flip option
sim2 <- item.sim(8)
omega(sim2) #an example of misidentification-- remember to look at the loadings matrices.
omega(sim2,2) #this shows that in fact there is no general factor
omega(sim2,2,option="first") #but, if we define one of the two group factors
#as a general factor, we get a falsely high omega
#apply omega to analyze 6 mental ability tests
data(ability.cov) #has a covariance matrix
omega(ability.cov$cov)
#om <- omega(Thurstone)
#round(om$omega.group,2)
#round(om$omega.group[2]/om$omega.group[1],2) #fraction of reliable that is general variance
# round(om$omega.group[3]/om$omega.group[1],2) #fraction of reliable that is group variance
#To find factor score estimates for the hierarchical model it is necessary to
#do two extra steps.
#Consider the case of the raw data in an object data. (An example from simulation)
# set.seed(42)
# gload <- matrix(c(.9,.8,.7),nrow=3)
# fload <- matrix(c(.8,.7,.6,rep(0,9),.7,.6,.5,rep(0,9),.7,.6,.4), ncol=3)
# data <- sim.hierarchical(gload=gload,fload=fload, n=100000, raw=TRUE)
#
# f3 <- fa(data$observed,3,scores="tenBerge", oblique.scores=TRUE)
# f1 <- fa(f3$scores)
# om <- omega(data$observed,sl=FALSE) #draw the hierarchical figure
# The scores from om are based upon the Schmid-Leiman factors and although the g factor
# is identical, the group factors are not.
# This is seen in the following correlation matrix
# hier.scores <- cbind(om$scores,f1$scores,f3$scores)
# lowerCor(hier.scores)
#
#this next set of examples require lavaan
#jensen <- sim.hierarchical() #create a hierarchical structure (same as v9 above)
#om.jen <- omegaSem(jensen,lavaan=TRUE) #do the exploratory omega with confirmatory as well
#lav.mod <- om.jen$omegaSem$model$lavaan #get the lavaan code or create it yourself
# lav.mod <- 'g =~ +V1+V2+V3+V4+V5+V6+V7+V8+V9
# F1=~ + V1 + V2 + V3
# F2=~ + V4 + V5 + V6
# F3=~ + V7 + V8 + V9 '
#lav.jen <- cfa(lav.mod,sample.cov=jensen,sample.nobs=500,orthogonal=TRUE,std.lv=TRUE)
# omegaFromSem(lav.jen,jensen)
#the directSl solution
#direct.jen <- directSl(jen)
#direct.jen
#try a one factor solution -- this is not recommended, but sometimes done
#it will just give omega_total
# lav.mod.1 <- 'g =~ +V1+V2+V3+V4+V5+V6+V7+V8+V9 '
#lav.jen.1<- cfa(lav.mod.1,sample.cov=jensen,sample.nobs=500,orthogonal=TRUE,std.lv=TRUE)
# omegaFromSem(lav.jen.1,jensen)
# }
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