Thanks Sarah,
I did do a quick read of his page and noted these things - and nice to have you confirm he is a top bloke and you know him well. I assumed his focus on this would, as those papers were, be the psychometric scale part. I thought it would be nice to get a sense of what the 'psychometric' would focus on, hence looking up his research - I have a psychology background, so I'm aware that this can be a pretty broad area in applicability/context (eg as far as things used for job interviews or air traffic control). But note his background in exercise science and health/medicine but recent focus on the stats stuff so didn't know how much to assume re: that
Am I right in taking from your answer that what you mean is that he is 'a fresh start' so the data and measures from him would start from scratch rather than drawing on past psychometrics he might have worked on with others in other contexts? and be driven by your starting from fresh as your own team - and wouldn't be building on other scales in similar literatures?
Or, if it is going to be drawn on, I'd be interested in answers re: my question was about the recent study he was involved in, that was about Covid-19, but specifically Long Covid/Post-covid
(The modified COVID-19 Yorkshire Rehabilitation Scale (C19-YRSm) patient-reported outcome measure for Long Covid or Post-COVID-19 syndrome)
- which seems to have measures in it too, so it would be good to know if it is this sort of thing that would give us a 'flavour' of what might be being looked at in that area?
The paper itself is here:
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35603810/
and there is also one focused on the psychometric analysis here:
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34676578/
which has the following quote in its abstract:
So I did wonder whether given this, the psychometrics might be for this project likely to be along similar types of lines/these papers might provide some flavour etc?
I'm sure that you can see why it is an obvious and straightforward question in my mind to ask, even just given how literature often works (building on other existing scales in similar areas) - is this study and its scales/measures similar or going to be any type of starting point for yours?