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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2016 Jan 30.
Published in final edited form as: Psychiatry Res. 2014 Nov 11;225(0):70–78. doi: 10.1016/j.psychres.2014.10.013

Table 2.

Factor loadings based on principle components analysis with varimax rotation for the 8 items of the General Causality Orientation Scale for Clinical Populations (GCOS-CP) from Study 1.

GCOS-CP Item Autonomy Impersonal Control
Autonomy Factor
4b. How interested you are in the hobby. .678
3c. Seek participation: get inputs from others who want to make decisions before you make the final call. .671
5b. Ask her what’s been going on, and offer to help resolve it. .639
7a. Share your observations with him (her) and try to find out what is going on for him (her). .615 −.404
8a. Find an opportunity to explain why it bothers you; your friend or roommate may not even realize how much it is bothering you. .591 −.391 .284
2b. Each make suggestions and then decide together on something that you both feel like doing. .576 −.211
1a. Simply assigning times that each can break to avoid any problems. .516
6c. Try to understand why your friend or roommate does it and why it is so upsetting for you. .424
    Internal consistency (α) = .734
Impersonal Factor
8b. Say nothing; if your friend or roommate cared about you she would understand how you felt. −.406 .622
5c. It’s hard to know what to do. .607
7b. Ignore it because there’s not much you can do about it anyway. −.456 .588
6b. Avoid your friend or roommate when he does it. .587
3b. Follow precedent: you’re not really up to the task so you’d do it the way it’s been done before. .568
2a. Leave it up to your friend/roommate; he/she probably wouldn’t want to do what you’d suggest. .459
4a. If you will be any good at the hobby. .249 .424 .323
1b. Find out from someone in authority what to do, or do what has been done in the past. .233
    Internal consistency (α) = .666
Control Factor
8c. Demand that your friend or roommate start being more considerate; otherwise you’ll respond similarly. −.234 .261 .675
6b. Point it out each time you notice it so you can have a better friendship. −.247 .611
7b. Tell him (her) that you’re willing to spend time together only if he (she) makes more of an effort. .608
2a. Talk your friend into doing what you want to do because you’ll both have fun. .566
5c. Tell her she has not been as helpful lately. .548
3b. Take charge: you don’t have to deal with everyone’s opinions that way. .447
4a. If people will criticize your work. .422
1b. Find out from someone in authority what to do, or do what has been done in the past. .321
    Internal consistency (α) = .651