social relations model: estimation distinguishable dyads

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Social Relations Model: Estimation Distinguishable Dyads David A. Kenny

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Social Relations Model: Estimation Distinguishable Dyads. David A. Kenny. Background. Social Relations Model Confirmatory Factor Analysis. Data Structure. Members of the groups are distinguishable. Each member has a different role. Prototypical example a family mother, father, & child - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Social Relations Model: Estimation Distinguishable Dyads

Social Relations Model:Estimation Distinguishable Dyads

David A. Kenny

Page 2: Social Relations Model: Estimation Distinguishable Dyads

BackgroundSocial Relations ModelConfirmatory Factor Analysis

Page 3: Social Relations Model: Estimation Distinguishable Dyads

Data StructureMembers of the groups are

distinguishable.Each member has a different role.Prototypical example

a familymother, father, & child

Other exampleswork teamslaboratory teams with roles or types

Page 4: Social Relations Model: Estimation Distinguishable Dyads
Page 5: Social Relations Model: Estimation Distinguishable Dyads

Four-Person FamilyIn the four-person family, there are twelve possible relationships:

mother-father (MF) father-mother (FM)

mother-older child (MO) father-older child (FO)

mother-younger child (MY) father-younger child (FY)

older child-mother (OM) younger child-mother (YM)

older child-father (OF) younger child-father (YF)

older child-younger c. (OY) younger child-older c. (YO)

The first letter corresponds to the actor and the second letter corresponds to the partner.

Page 6: Social Relations Model: Estimation Distinguishable Dyads

StrategyCreate a variance-covariance matrix of the 12 variables (MF, MO, MY, FM … YO).

Analyze by Confirmatory Factor Analysis.

Page 7: Social Relations Model: Estimation Distinguishable Dyads

FactorsEach measure loads on a group,

actor, and partner factor.Separate actor and partner

variances can be estimated for each member of the group.

All loading fixed at 1.Relationship effects are treated as

“errors.”

Page 8: Social Relations Model: Estimation Distinguishable Dyads

OF: Older Child with Father

Loadings

Actor Factor: Older Child

Partner Factor: Father

Group or Family Factor

Page 9: Social Relations Model: Estimation Distinguishable Dyads

Correlations

Generalized reciprocity: Actor-partner correlation, one for role

Dyadic reciprocity: Correlation of errors, one for each pair of roles

Page 10: Social Relations Model: Estimation Distinguishable Dyads

IdentificationNeed at least 4 members of the

group to estimate all the SRM variances and correlations.

With 3 members, an identifying assumptions must be made, e.g., no group variance.

Page 11: Social Relations Model: Estimation Distinguishable Dyads

Degrees of Freedom

CFA with 4 members: df = 47CFA with 3 members and no

group variance: df = 3

Page 12: Social Relations Model: Estimation Distinguishable Dyads

Diagram for 3-Person Family

Page 13: Social Relations Model: Estimation Distinguishable Dyads

Model the MeansWe can estimate factor means for each of

the factors.

To be identified, we nee to make constraints.

One idea is ANOVA constraints: actor and partner effects sum to zero; relationship effects sum to zero by row and column.

Page 14: Social Relations Model: Estimation Distinguishable Dyads

Separating Error from

RelationshipNeed multiple measures.

xxx

Page 15: Social Relations Model: Estimation Distinguishable Dyads

What To Do If the Model Does Not

Fit?Generally the model does fit.

For families, if it does not, can estimate correlations for intra-generational effects. See Kenny et al. (2006) for details.

Page 16: Social Relations Model: Estimation Distinguishable Dyads

Variance Partitioning

For a four-person, each of 12 scores has four different sources of variance.

Except for the family variance, the other three sources explain a different amount.

Different profile of proportion of variance explained for each score.

Page 17: Social Relations Model: Estimation Distinguishable Dyads

ReferenceReading: Chapter 9 of Dyadic Data Analysis by Kenny, Kashy, and Cook.

Page 18: Social Relations Model: Estimation Distinguishable Dyads

Thank You!