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Vautier, Stephane; Bonnefon, Jean-Francois – Applied Psychological Measurement, 2008
Individuals routinely rate themselves higher than their peers on a number of attributes and capabilities, including their satisfaction with life. However, the construct validity of this above-average effect requires specific psychometric properties of ratings of one's contentment and ratings of others' perceived contentment. This article tests…
Descriptors: Life Satisfaction, Research Methodology, Construct Validity, Psychometrics

Edwards, Allen L.; Gonzalez, Richard – Applied Psychological Measurement, 1993
A simplified version of successive intervals scaling is described. Scale values for various datasets obtained with simplified successive intervals scaling are approximately linearly related to those obtained with traditional successive intervals scaling and the method of pair comparisons. The ease of use and some cautions in method use are…
Descriptors: Attitude Measures, Mathematical Models, Research Methodology, Scaling

Roberts, James S.; Donoghue, John R.; Laughlin, James E. – Applied Psychological Measurement, 2002
Investigated the data demands associated with the marginal maximum likelihood (MML) expected a posterior (EAP) methodology and the precision of the resulting parameter estimates when data fit the underlying model through simulation. Also studied the extent to which a misspecified prior distribution would affect the item and person parameter…
Descriptors: Estimation (Mathematics), Maximum Likelihood Statistics, Models, Research Methodology

May, Kim – Applied Psychological Measurement, 1993
This book uses concepts familiar to those with a working knowledge of basic statistics and classical test theory to present item response theory models that are currently in wide use in both practical testing and research. The book would serve as a good entry-level graduate text in psychometrics and measurement methods. (SLD)
Descriptors: Educational Research, Graduate Study, Item Response Theory, Measurement Techniques

Zimmerman, Donald W.; And Others – Applied Psychological Measurement, 1993
Some of the methods originally used to find relationships between reliability and power associated with a single measurement are extended to difference scores. Results, based on explicit power calculations, show that augmenting the reliability of measurement by reducing error score variance can make significance tests of difference more powerful.…
Descriptors: Equations (Mathematics), Error of Measurement, Individual Differences, Mathematical Models

Russell, Craig J.; And Others – Applied Psychological Measurement, 1991
Analysis of hypothetical data with dependent responses demonstrates how information loss caused by the overt response scale has an unknown influence on effect sizes in moderated regression analysis. The number of scale steps measuring the dependent variable results in a form of systematic error that alters interaction effect sizes. (SLD)
Descriptors: Effect Size, Hypothesis Testing, Likert Scales, Mathematical Models

Chatterjee, Sangit; Yilmaz, Mustafa – Applied Psychological Measurement, 1992
The importance of regression diagnostics in detecting influential data points is discussed, and five statistics are recommended for the applied researcher. The suggested diagnostics were used on a dataset of 24 subjects, and effects were analyzed. Colinearity-based diagnostics and diagnostics for a variety of procedures are discussed. (SLD)
Descriptors: Behavioral Science Research, Diagnostic Tests, Equations (Mathematics), Error of Measurement