Stanford Sleepiness Scale
The Stanford Sleepiness Scale , developed by Dement and colleagues in 1972, is a one-item self-report questionnaire measuring levels of sleepiness throughout the day. The scale, which can be administered in 1–2 minutes, is generally used to track overall alertness at each hour of the day. The scale has been validated for adult populations aged 18 and older. The SSS is used in both research and clinical settings to assess the level of intervention or effectiveness of a specific treatment in order to compare a clients progress.
Reliability and validity
Reliability
refers to whether the scores are reproducible. Unless otherwise specified, the reliability scores and values come from studies done with a United States population sample.Criterion | Rating | Explanation with references |
Norms | Not applicable | Mean and standard deviation do not exist because the SSS is a single item questionnaire. |
Internal consistency | Not applicable | SSS only has one question |
Inter-rater reliability | Not applicable | Designed originally as a self-report scale |
Test-retest reliability | Good | r =.88 |
Repeatability | Not published | No published studies formally checking repeatability |
Validity
describes the evidence that an assessment tool measures what it was supposed to measure. Unless otherwise specified, the reliability scores and values come from studies done with a United States population sample.Criterion | Rating | Explanation with references |
Content validity | Adequate | Follows characteristics of alertness, but sleepiness is not unidimensional and difficult to quantify |
Construct validity | Good | Shows convergent validity with other symptom scales such as ESS and Karolinska Sleepiness Scale, prediction of performance after sleep deprivation |
Discriminative validity | Adequate | Studies do not report AUCs, some mention overlap between sleepiness, physical tiredness, and depression |
Validity generalization | Good | Evidence supports use in a variety of research and clinical settings, but only in persons of 18 years and older |
Treatment sensitivity | Not applicable | SSS is not intended for use as a measure of outcome |
Clinical utility | Adequate | Free, brief, easy administration |