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On exploratory factor analysis: a review of recent evidence, an assessment of current practice, and recommendations for future use

Gaskin,CJ and Happell,B 2014, On exploratory factor analysis: a review of recent evidence, an assessment of current practice, and recommendations for future use, International journal of nursing studies, vol. 51, no. 3, pp. 511-521, doi: 10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2013.10.005.

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Title On exploratory factor analysis: a review of recent evidence, an assessment of current practice, and recommendations for future use
Author(s) Gaskin,CJORCID iD for Gaskin,CJ orcid.org/0000-0001-5240-4320
Happell,B
Journal name International journal of nursing studies
Volume number 51
Issue number 3
Start page 511
End page 521
Publisher Elsevier
Place of publication Bromley, England
Publication date 2014-03
ISSN 1873-491X
Keyword(s) Factor analysis
Measurement
Nursing research
Principal components analysis
Research design
Review literature as topic
Statistics
Statistics as topic
Summary Exploratory factor analysis (hereafter, factor analysis) is a complex statistical method that is integral to many fields of research. Using factor analysis requires researchers to make several decisions, each of which affects the solutions generated. In this paper, we focus on five major decisions that are made in conducting factor analysis: (i) establishing how large the sample needs to be, (ii) choosing between factor analysis and principal components analysis, (iii) determining the number of factors to retain, (iv) selecting a method of data extraction, and (v) deciding upon the methods of factor rotation. The purpose of this paper is threefold: (i) to review the literature with respect to these five decisions, (ii) to assess current practices in nursing research, and (iii) to offer recommendations for future use. The literature reviews illustrate that factor analysis remains a dynamic field of study, with recent research having practical implications for those who use this statistical method. The assessment was conducted on 54 factor analysis (and principal components analysis) solutions presented in the results sections of 28 papers published in the 2012 volumes of the 10 highest ranked nursing journals, based on their 5-year impact factors. The main findings from the assessment were that researchers commonly used (a) participants-to-items ratios for determining sample sizes (used for 43% of solutions), (b) principal components analysis (61%) rather than factor analysis (39%), (c) the eigenvalues greater than one rule and screen tests to decide upon the numbers of factors/components to retain (61% and 46%, respectively), (d) principal components analysis and unweighted least squares as methods of data extraction (61% and 19%, respectively), and (e) the Varimax method of rotation (44%). In general, well-established, but out-dated, heuristics and practices informed decision making with respect to the performance of factor analysis in nursing studies. Based on the findings from factor analysis research, it seems likely that the use of such methods may have had a material, adverse effect on the solutions generated. We offer recommendations for future practice with respect to each of the five decisions discussed in this paper.
Language eng
DOI 10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2013.10.005
Field of Research 170110 Psychological Methodology, Design and Analysis
Socio Economic Objective 970117 Expanding Knowledge in Psychology and Cognitive Sciences
HERDC Research category C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal
ERA Research output type C Journal article
Copyright notice ©2014, Elsevier
Persistent URL http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30072175

Document type: Journal Article
Collections: Faculty of Health
School of Psychology
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Citation counts: TR Web of Science Citation Count  Cited 238 times in TR Web of Science
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