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Joseph A. Rios; Jiayi Deng – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 2024
Rapid guessing (RG) is a form of non-effortful responding that is characterized by short response latencies. This construct-irrelevant behavior has been shown in previous research to bias inferences concerning measurement properties and scores. To mitigate these deleterious effects, a number of response time threshold scoring procedures have been…
Descriptors: Reaction Time, Scores, Item Response Theory, Guessing (Tests)
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Nana Kim; Daniel M. Bolt – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2024
Some previous studies suggest that response times (RTs) on rating scale items can be informative about the content trait, but a more recent study suggests they may also be reflective of response styles. The latter result raises questions about the possible consideration of RTs for content trait estimation, as response styles are generally viewed…
Descriptors: Item Response Theory, Reaction Time, Response Style (Tests), Psychometrics
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Joseph A. Rios; Jiayi Deng – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 2025
To mitigate the potential damaging consequences of rapid guessing (RG), a form of noneffortful responding, researchers have proposed a number of scoring approaches. The present simulation study examines the robustness of the most popular of these approaches, the unidimensional effort-moderated (EM) scoring procedure, to multidimensional RG (i.e.,…
Descriptors: Scoring, Guessing (Tests), Reaction Time, Item Response Theory
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Zhichen Guo; Daxun Wang; Yan Cai; Dongbo Tu – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 2024
Forced-choice (FC) measures have been widely used in many personality or attitude tests as an alternative to rating scales, which employ comparative rather than absolute judgments. Several response biases, such as social desirability, response styles, and acquiescence bias, can be reduced effectively. Another type of data linked with comparative…
Descriptors: Item Response Theory, Models, Reaction Time, Measurement Techniques
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Sun-Joo Cho; Amanda Goodwin; Matthew Naveiras; Jorge Salas – Journal of Educational Measurement, 2024
Despite the growing interest in incorporating response time data into item response models, there has been a lack of research investigating how the effect of speed on the probability of a correct response varies across different groups (e.g., experimental conditions) for various items (i.e., differential response time item analysis). Furthermore,…
Descriptors: Item Response Theory, Reaction Time, Models, Accuracy
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Jana Welling; Timo Gnambs; Claus H. Carstensen – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 2024
Disengaged responding poses a severe threat to the validity of educational large-scale assessments, because item responses from unmotivated test-takers do not reflect their actual ability. Existing identification approaches rely primarily on item response times, which bears the risk of misclassifying fast engaged or slow disengaged responses.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Students, Guessing (Tests), Multiple Choice Tests
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Yi-Hsuan Lee; Yue Jia – Applied Measurement in Education, 2024
Test-taking experience is a consequence of the interaction between students and assessment properties. We define a new notion, rapid-pacing behavior, to reflect two types of test-taking experience -- disengagement and speededness. To identify rapid-pacing behavior, we extend existing methods to develop response-time thresholds for individual items…
Descriptors: Adaptive Testing, Reaction Time, Item Response Theory, Test Format
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Sun-Joo Cho; Amanda Goodwin; Matthew Naveiras; Jorge Salas – Grantee Submission, 2024
Despite the growing interest in incorporating response time data into item response models, there has been a lack of research investigating how the effect of speed on the probability of a correct response varies across different groups (e.g., experimental conditions) for various items (i.e., differential response time item analysis). Furthermore,…
Descriptors: Item Response Theory, Reaction Time, Models, Accuracy