Abstract

Cronbach's alpha (α) is a widely-used measure of reliability used to quantify the amount of random measurement error that exists in a sum score or average generated by a multi-item measurement scale. Yet methodologists have warned that α is not an optimal measure of reliability relative to its more general form, McDonald's omega (ω). Among other reasons, that the computation of ω is not available as an option in many popular statistics programs and requires items loadings from a confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) have probably hindered more widespread adoption. After a bit of discussion of α versus ω, we illustrate the computation of ω using two structural equation modeling programs (Mplus and AMOS) and the MBESS package for R. We then describe a macro for SPSS and SAS (OMEGA) that calculates ω in two ways without relying on the estimation of loadings or error variances using CFA. We show that it produces estimates of ω that are nearly identical to when using CFA-based estimates of item loadings and error variances. We also discuss the use of the OMEGA macro for certain forms of item analysis and brief form construction based on the removal of items from a longer scale.

Keywords

Cronbach's alphaReliability (semiconductor)Confirmatory factor analysisOmegaStatisticsMacroMeasure (data warehouse)Structural equation modelingComputationComputer scienceScale (ratio)Alpha (finance)Standard errorEconometricsPsychometricsMathematicsData miningAlgorithm

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Publication Info

Year
2020
Type
article
Volume
14
Issue
1
Pages
1-24
Citations
2119
Access
Closed

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2119
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236
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Cite This

Andrew F. Hayes, Jacob J. Coutts (2020). Use Omega Rather than Cronbach’s Alpha for Estimating Reliability. But…. Communication Methods and Measures , 14 (1) , 1-24. https://doi.org/10.1080/19312458.2020.1718629

Identifiers

DOI
10.1080/19312458.2020.1718629

Data Quality

Data completeness: 77%