Authors
Steven L Neuberg, T Nicole Judice, Stephen G West
Publication date
1997/6
Journal
Journal of personality and social psychology
Volume
72
Issue
6
Pages
1396
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Description
The Need for Closure Scale (NFCS; DM Webster & AW Kruglanski, 1994) was introduced to assess the extent to which a person, faced with a decision or judgment, desires any answer, as compared with confusion and ambiguity. The NFCS was presented as being unidimensional and as having adequate discriminant validity. Our data contradict these conceptual and psychometric claims. As a unidimensional scale, the NFCS is redundant with the Personal Need for Structure Scale (PNS; MM Thompson, ME Naccarato, & KE Parker, 1989). When the NFCS is used more appropriately as a multidimensional instrument, 3 of its facets are redundant with the PNS Scale, and a 4th is redundant with the Personal Fear of Invalidity Scale (MM Thompson et al., 1989). It is suggested that the NFCS masks important distinctions between 2 independent epistemic motives: the preference for quick, decisive answers (nonspecific …
Total citations
199719981999200020012002200320042005200620072008200920102011201220132014201520162017201820192020202120222023202494141181512131320242232201714141518242119141822241610