1974
DOI: 10.2466/pr0.1974.35.1.479
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Reliabilities and Validities of the Mood Questionnaire

Abstract: Scales were constructed for a 40-item mood questionnaire administered to a sample of 1140 Navy recruits. The questionnaire was shown to be similar to others in content and reliabilities. Construct, concurrent and predictive validities of the scales with several criteria in a number of testing situations are also presented. The findings emphasize the usefulness of this questionnaire as a criterion measure or as a predictor of objective behavioral criteria under field-testing conditions.

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Cited by 47 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…The mood questionnaire (Radloff & Helmreich, 1968;Ryman, Biersner, & LaRocco, 1974) gives a score on six scales: happiness, activity, depression, fear, anger, and fatigue.…”
Section: Pilot Mood Scalementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The mood questionnaire (Radloff & Helmreich, 1968;Ryman, Biersner, & LaRocco, 1974) gives a score on six scales: happiness, activity, depression, fear, anger, and fatigue.…”
Section: Pilot Mood Scalementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Again, the magnitudes of the canonical correlations and the group differences obtained with the alternative models were comparable (Table 4). Additional analyses compared the twodimensional mood models to a six-dimensional alternative including scales for happiness, activity, depression, fear (or anxiety), anger, and fatigue (Ryman, et al, 1974). Initial MANOVAs showed significant differences for these six scales between attrition groups (Hotelling's T = 2.38, p < .005; canonical r = .280) and between platoons (Hotelling's T 2 = 2.36, p < .001; canonical r = .304).…”
Section: Factor Identificationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thirty-two items were selected from Ryman, Biersner and LaRocco's (1974) mood questionnaire to evaluate the two-dimensional mood models (see Table I for items).…”
Section: Mr--j Questionnairementioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The Mood Questionnaire was described by Ryman, Biersner, & LaRocco (1974) and modified by Tyner, Manning, & Oleshansky (1989). It includes scales to measure fear, anger, depression, fatigue, activity, and happiness.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%