Spanish version of the Plymouth sensory imagery questionnaire
ABSTRACT
Objective: The current interest in mental imagery in fields such as sport and physical
training, health, education, underscore the need for designing general measures of
imagery vividness that include different sensorial modalities such as the Plymouth
Sensory Imagery Questionnaire (Psi-Q; Andrade et al., 2014). The Psi-Q measures
imagery vividness in seven sensorial modalities with a factorial structure of seven factors
corresponding to the sensorial modalities, and has good internal consistency. The
aim of the present study was to translate the Psi-Q into Spanish and to assess its
psychometric properties.
Methods: The questionnaire was back-translated, and administered to 394 fine arts
undergraduates. Moreover, this test was compared to other questionnaires measuring
different types de imagery.
Results: A confirmatory factor analysis found that the Psi-Q had seven factors (vision,
sound, smell, taste, touch, bodily sensation, and emotional feeling) with results similar
to the original test. Values suggested a better fit for the model of the short version. The
internal consistency values were 0.93 for the long and 0.89 for the short test. The Psi-Q
subscales correlated significantly (p < 0.01) with the total of the Betts’ QMI subscales,
and the VVIQ, with the highest significance observed between the Psi-Q Touch and
Betts’ QMI Cutaneous (r = -0.57), and between the Psi-Q Olfactory and Betts’ QMI
Smell (r = -0.56). Owing to its novelty, the high correlation and significance (p < 0.01)
between Psi-Q Vision and the OSIVQ Object (r = 0.36) is worth noting.
Conclusion: The Spanish version of the Psi-Q was an adequate measure for evaluating
different sensorial modalities of imagery vividness, and exhibited similar psychometric
properties to those of the original version. The growing interest in mental imagery in
different fields of application justifies the need for adapting the Psi-Q for the Spanish
speaking population. This questionnaire is a valuable tool for the understanding of
imagery as a psychological process, and as a variable influencing other processes