Measuring the unmeasurable: Psychometric tools for Existential Concerns
Key psychometric instruments for measuring existential concerns: meaning in life, existential isolation, and existential anxiety.
Edited By Robert A. Neimeyer (2015)
Handbook synthesizing theory and validated instruments for assessing death anxiety, threat, and attitudes, with guidance for research and practice.
This edited volume matters because it addresses a chronic problem in death-anxiety research: heavy use of convenient but psychometrically weak measures and weak theory-to-measure fit. It consolidates six of the most used and best-validated tools (with scoring keys) and critically reviews their reliability, validity, dimensionality, and appropriate applications. Beyond measurement, it links major philosophical/psychological theories to testable research directions and illustrates applied uses in settings like nursing homes, psychotherapy, HIV care, near-death experiences, and death education. The implication is a more cumulative, comparable literature—where investigators choose measures based on constructs and populations, not just face validity or a single alpha value.
Mostly empirical, though there are some theoretical considerations.
death studies; background in psychological measurement/psychometrics and basic thanatology/clinical or health psychology concepts
A really nice collection of the instruments of how to assess death atittudes or anxiety
— ES