Clinical Interventions in Aging (Sep 2022)
Translation, Adaptation, and Psychometric Testing of the Almere Technology Acceptance Questionnaire (ATAQ) Among Older Adults in China
Abstract
Ying He,1 Qian Liu,1 Qiu He,2 Lun Li3 1School of Medicine, Hunan Normal University, Changsha, People’s Republic of China; 2The Second Xiangya Hospital of Central South University, Changsha, People’s Republic of China; 3Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Dalian University of Technology, Dalian, People’s Republic of ChinaCorrespondence: Ying He, School of Medicine, Hunan Normal University, No. 371 Tongzipo Road, Yuelu District, Changsha, 410013, People’s Republic of China, Tel +86-15874107215, Email [email protected]: Lack of information on technology Acceptance of Social Assistant robots (SARs) limits the application of robots in the elderly care sector. Currently, no study has not reported a robot acceptance assessment tool in China.Purpose: The current study aimed to translate the Almere Technology Acceptance Questionnaire (ATAQ) from English to Mandarin Chinese, perform cross-cultural adaptations, and to evaluate its psychometric properties among elderly people in China.Methods: This study was conducted in two phases. Phase 1 comprised the context relevance evaluation, instrument translation, and cultural adaption from English to Mandarin Chinese. Phase 2 involved a quantitative cross-sectional survey of psychometric testing among 317 elderly Chinese, including reliability and evaluation of construct validity.Results: In Phase 1, the Context Relevance Index of all items was rated “ 3 = relevant” or “ 4 = totally relevant”, and the Translation Validity Index of the 100% items of the ATAQ was rated 3 or 4. The ATAQ-Chinese questionnaire comprised 30 items. In Phase 2, all items of the ATAQ-Chinese questionnaire had a CR above 3 (P< 0.001). Correlation coefficients of entries in the current study ranged from 0.403 to 0.763 (P< 0.001). Nine factors were extracted through Exploratory Factor Analysis, and the cumulative variance contribution rate was 77.175%. Confirmatory Factor Analysis showed that the model had a good fit (χ2/df=2.006, RMSEA=0.069, RMR=0.059, GFI=0.816, IFI=0.913, TLI=0.896, CFI=0.912). The content validity index was 0.92 indicating that all questions were relevant. The value of Cronbach’s alpha coefficient showed high validity (α= 0.945, 0.664– 0.891). The test-retest reliability coefficient was 0.980, indicating that the tool was reliable.Conclusion: The Chinese version of ATAQ has good reliability and validity, and it is an acceptable, reliable, and valid tool for determining technology acceptance of Social assistant robots in older adults.Keywords: Almere model, psychometric property, social assistant robots, technology acceptance