Hi Michael,
die gibt es massig. Ich bin etwas überrascht, dass du nix findest. Ich hab mal in meiner Datenbank gefischt - die folgenden könnten ein
Ansatzpunkt sein. Ansonsten google mal nach latent cross lagged panel.
Gruß
Holger
Finkel, S.E. (1995). Causal analysis with panel data. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
Kessler, R.C., & Greenberg, D.F. (1981). Linear panel analysis: Models of quantitative change. New York: Academic Press.
Curran, P.J., & Bollen, K.A. (2001). The best of both worlds: Combining autoregressive and latent
curve models. In L.M. Collins & A.G. Sayer (Eds.), New Methods for the Analysis of Change (pp. 105-136). Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.
http://www.unc.edu/~curran/pdfs/Curran&Bollen(2001).pdf
Bollen, K.A., & Curran, P.J. (2004). Autoregressive latent trajectory (ALT) models: A synthesis of two traditions. Sociological Methods and Research, 32, 336-383.
http://www.unc.edu/~curran/pdfs/Bollen&Curran(2004).pdf
Steinmetz, H., Frese, M., & Schmidt, P. (2008). A longitudinal panel study on antecedents and outcomes of work–home interference. Journal of Vocational Behavior, 73(2), 231–241.
Frese, M., Garst, H., & Fay, D. (2007). Making things happen: Reciprocal relationships between work characteristics and personal initiative in a four-wave longitudinal structural equation model. Journal of Applied Psychology, 92(4), 1084-1102.