The PREPARED Center for Emergency Response Research

Fantastic Reality Ability MEasurement (FRAME)

Fantastic Reality Ability MEasurement (FRAME)

Fantastic reality ability (FRA) is defined as the capacity to use imagination in response to stress or trauma; it has been identified as an important concept in trauma-focused therapy. This manuscript presents the newly developed 21-item scale, Fantastic Reality Ability
MEasurement (FRAME), based on responses from 502 Israeli adults.
The development and initial psychometric validation of this scale is
detailed.

A four-factor solution was identified: Coping, Control,
Transcendence, and Playfulness. Each factor contributes significantly
to the measurement of a higher-order FRA latent construct.

FRAME responses demonstrated high internal consistency (α =.88) and good test–retest reliability over 27 weeks (.60 < r >.80). We also report robust correlations between the FRAME and measures of ego-resiliency, playfulness, and fantasy proneness. The FRAME enables one to briefly measure imagination use in response to trauma and could serve as part of questionnaire batteries measuring individual differences and used in clinical research.

 

To cite this article: Dori Rubinstein, Mooli Lahad, Dimitry Leykin & Limor Aharonson-Daniel
(2021) Development and Validation of Fantastic Reality Ability Measurement (FRAME) to Measure Use of Imagination in Response to Stress and Trauma, Journal of Creativity in Mental Health, 16:4, 412-427, DOI: 10.1080/15401383.2020.1789017
To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.1080/15401383.2020.1789017