Marsh, Herbert W.2011-06-132011-06-131989Marsh, Herbert W. (1989). Confirmatory factor analyses of multitrait-multimethod data: Many problems and a few solutions. Applied Psychological Measurement, 13, 335-361. doi:10.1177/014662168901300402doi:10.1177/014662168901300402https://hdl.handle.net/11299/107372During the last 15 years there has been a steady increase in the popularity and sophistication of the confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) approach to multitrait-multimethod (MTMM) data. This approach, however, incurs some important problems, the most serious being the ill-defined solutions that plague MTMM studies and the assumption that so-called method factors reflect primarily the influence of method effects. In three different MTMM studies, ill-defined solutions were frequent and alternative parameterizations designed to solve this problem tended to mask the symptoms instead of eliminating the problem. More importantly, so-called method factors apparently represented trait variance in addition to, or instead of, method variance for at least some models in all three studies. Further support for this counterinterpretation of method factors was found when external validity criteria were added to the MTMM models and correlated with trait and so-called method factors. This problem, when it exists, invalidates the traditional interpretation of trait and method factors and the comparison of different MTMM models. A new specification of method effects as correlated uniquenesses instead of method factors was less prone to ill-defined solutions and, apparently, to the confounding of trait and method effects. Index terms: confirmatory factor analysis, construct validity, convergent validity, correlated uniquenesses, discriminant validity, empirical underidentification, LISREL, method effects, multitrait-multimethod analysis.enConfirmatory factor analyses of multitrait-multimethod data: Many problems and a few solutionsArticle