Abstract
Attachment insecurity is important for psychotherapy both as an aspect influencing the therapeutic process as well as potential outcome variable of a treatment. Two German short forms of the Experiences in Close Relationships – Revised (ECR-R) have been proposed to assess individual differences in attachment anxiety and avoidance. In this research, we examined whether these questionnaires are suitable for measuring change in attachment anxiety and avoidance by testing longitudinal measurement invariance in two independent clinical samples (N1 = 493, N2 = 273) using a pre-post design. Results indicated that strict longitudinal measurement invariance can be assumed for both measures. Thus, changes in scale scores before and after treatment can be interpreted as changes in the latent dimensions of attachment anxiety and avoidance. Both questionnaires were also sensitive to treatment in that attachment insecurity was overall reduced after therapy. Although both measures appear to be generally suitable for investigating treatment effects, they exhibited consistent problems with structural validity across samples that should be reexamined in future research.
Data availability statement
The data that support the findings of this study are available from the corresponding author, [SM], upon reasonable request.
Notes
1 Whereas Ehrenthal et al. (Citation2021) relied on the WLSMV estimator for CFA modeling of the two German short forms, using MLR in the present study facilitated measurement invariance testing with its more established guidelines. In addition, upon inspection, CFA results were largely similar between WLSMV and MLR in both samples and suggested the same general conclusions.