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Jihong Zhang; Jonathan Templin; Xinya Liang – Journal of Educational Measurement, 2024
Recently, Bayesian diagnostic classification modeling has been becoming popular in health psychology, education, and sociology. Typically information criteria are used for model selection when researchers want to choose the best model among alternative models. In Bayesian estimation, posterior predictive checking is a flexible Bayesian model…
Descriptors: Bayesian Statistics, Cognitive Measurement, Models, Classification
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Bolt, Daniel M.; Kim, Jee-Seon – Journal of Educational Measurement, 2018
Cognitive diagnosis models (CDMs) typically assume skill attributes with discrete (often binary) levels of skill mastery, making the existence of skill continuity an anticipated form of model misspecification. In this article, misspecification due to skill continuity is argued to be of particular concern for several CDM applications due to the…
Descriptors: Cognitive Measurement, Models, Mastery Learning, Accuracy
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Qiao, Xin; Jiao, Hong – Journal of Educational Measurement, 2021
This study proposes explanatory cognitive diagnostic model (CDM) jointly incorporating responses and response times (RTs) with the inclusion of item covariates related to both item responses and RTs. The joint modeling of item responses and RTs intends to provide more information for cognitive diagnosis while item covariates can be used to predict…
Descriptors: Cognitive Measurement, Models, Reaction Time, Test Items
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Köhler, Carmen; Pohl, Steffi; Carstensen, Claus H. – Journal of Educational Measurement, 2017
Competence data from low-stakes educational large-scale assessment studies allow for evaluating relationships between competencies and other variables. The impact of item-level nonresponse has not been investigated with regard to statistics that determine the size of these relationships (e.g., correlations, regression coefficients). Classical…
Descriptors: Test Items, Cognitive Measurement, Testing Problems, Regression (Statistics)
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Hsu, Chia-Ling; Wang, Wen-Chung – Journal of Educational Measurement, 2015
Cognitive diagnosis models provide profile information about a set of latent binary attributes, whereas item response models yield a summary report on a latent continuous trait. To utilize the advantages of both models, higher order cognitive diagnosis models were developed in which information about both latent binary attributes and latent…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Testing, Adaptive Testing, Models, Cognitive Measurement
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Li, Xiaomin; Wang, Wen-Chung – Journal of Educational Measurement, 2015
The assessment of differential item functioning (DIF) is routinely conducted to ensure test fairness and validity. Although many DIF assessment methods have been developed in the context of classical test theory and item response theory, they are not applicable for cognitive diagnosis models (CDMs), as the underlying latent attributes of CDMs are…
Descriptors: Test Bias, Models, Cognitive Measurement, Evaluation Methods
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Hou, Likun; de la Torre, Jimmy; Nandakumar, Ratna – Journal of Educational Measurement, 2014
Analyzing examinees' responses using cognitive diagnostic models (CDMs) has the advantage of providing diagnostic information. To ensure the validity of the results from these models, differential item functioning (DIF) in CDMs needs to be investigated. In this article, the Wald test is proposed to examine DIF in the context of CDMs. This study…
Descriptors: Test Bias, Models, Simulation, Error Patterns
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de la Torre, Jimmy; Lee, Young-Sun – Journal of Educational Measurement, 2013
This article used the Wald test to evaluate the item-level fit of a saturated cognitive diagnosis model (CDM) relative to the fits of the reduced models it subsumes. A simulation study was carried out to examine the Type I error and power of the Wald test in the context of the G-DINA model. Results show that when the sample size is small and a…
Descriptors: Statistical Analysis, Test Items, Goodness of Fit, Error of Measurement
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Wang, Changjiang; Gierl, Mark J. – Journal of Educational Measurement, 2011
The purpose of this study is to apply the attribute hierarchy method (AHM) to a subset of SAT critical reading items and illustrate how the method can be used to promote cognitive diagnostic inferences. The AHM is a psychometric procedure for classifying examinees' test item responses into a set of attribute mastery patterns associated with…
Descriptors: Reading Comprehension, Test Items, Critical Reading, Protocol Analysis
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Gierl, Mark J. – Journal of Educational Measurement, 2007
The purpose of this paper is to describe the logic and identify key assumptions associated with making cognitive inferences using two attribute-based psychometric methods. The first method is Kikumi Tatsuoka's rule-space model. This model provides a strong point of reference for studying the nature of diagnostic inferences because it is important…
Descriptors: Testing, Diagnostic Tests, Psychometrics, Inferences
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Henson, Robert; Templin, Jonathan; Douglas, Jeffrey – Journal of Educational Measurement, 2007
Consider test data, a specified set of dichotomous skills measured by the test, and an IRT cognitive diagnosis model (ICDM). Statistical estimation of the data set using the ICDM can provide examinee estimates of mastery for these skills, referred to generally as attributes. With such detailed information about each examinee, future instruction…
Descriptors: Simulation, Teaching Methods, Testing, Diagnostic Tests
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Almond, Russell G.; DiBello, Louis V.; Moulder, Brad; Zapata-Rivera, Juan-Diego – Journal of Educational Measurement, 2007
This paper defines Bayesian network models and examines their applications to IRT-based cognitive diagnostic modeling. These models are especially suited to building inference engines designed to be synchronous with the finer grained student models that arise in skills diagnostic assessment. Aspects of the theory and use of Bayesian network models…
Descriptors: Inferences, Models, Item Response Theory, Cognitive Measurement