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Showing 1 to 15 of 17 results Save | Export
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Myoung-jae Lee; Goeun Lee; Jin-young Choi – Sociological Methods & Research, 2025
A linear model is often used to find the effect of a binary treatment D on a noncontinuous outcome Y with covariates X. Particularly, a binary Y gives the popular "linear probability model (LPM)," but the linear model is untenable if X contains a continuous regressor. This raises the question: what kind of treatment effect does the…
Descriptors: Probability, Least Squares Statistics, Regression (Statistics), Causal Models
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Michael Kane – ETS Research Report Series, 2023
Linear functional relationships are intended to be symmetric and therefore cannot generally be accurately estimated using ordinary least squares regression equations. Orthogonal regression (OR) models allow for errors in both "Y" and "X" and therefore can provide symmetric estimates of these relationships. The most…
Descriptors: Factor Analysis, Regression (Statistics), Mathematical Models, Relationship
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Taylor, John M. – Practical Assessment, Research & Evaluation, 2019
Although frequentist estimators can effectively fit ordinal confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) models, their assumptions are difficult to establish and estimation problems may prohibit their use at times. Consequently, researchers may want to also look to Bayesian analysis to fit their ordinal models. Bayesian methods offer researchers an…
Descriptors: Bayesian Statistics, Factor Analysis, Least Squares Statistics, Error of Measurement
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Kane, Michael T.; Mroch, Andrew A. – ETS Research Report Series, 2020
Ordinary least squares (OLS) regression and orthogonal regression (OR) address different questions and make different assumptions about errors. The OLS regression of Y on X yields predictions of a dependent variable (Y) contingent on an independent variable (X) and minimizes the sum of squared errors of prediction. It assumes that the independent…
Descriptors: Regression (Statistics), Least Squares Statistics, Test Bias, Error of Measurement
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DiStefano, Christine; McDaniel, Heather L.; Zhang, Liyun; Shi, Dexin; Jiang, Zhehan – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 2019
A simulation study was conducted to investigate the model size effect when confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) models include many ordinal items. CFA models including between 15 and 120 ordinal items were analyzed with mean- and variance-adjusted weighted least squares to determine how varying sample size, number of ordered categories, and…
Descriptors: Factor Analysis, Effect Size, Data, Sample Size
Koziol, Natalie A.; Bovaird, James A. – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 2018
Evaluations of measurement invariance provide essential construct validity evidence--a prerequisite for seeking meaning in psychological and educational research and ensuring fair testing procedures in high-stakes settings. However, the quality of such evidence is partly dependent on the validity of the resulting statistical conclusions. Type I or…
Descriptors: Computation, Tests, Error of Measurement, Comparative Analysis
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Pampaka, Maria; Hutcheson, Graeme; Williams, Julian – International Journal of Research & Method in Education, 2016
Missing data is endemic in much educational research. However, practices such as step-wise regression common in the educational research literature have been shown to be dangerous when significant data are missing, and multiple imputation (MI) is generally recommended by statisticians. In this paper, we provide a review of these advances and their…
Descriptors: Data Analysis, Statistical Inference, Error of Measurement, Computation
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Jacob, Robin T.; Goddard, Roger D.; Kim, Eun Sook – Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 2014
It is often difficult and costly to obtain individual-level student achievement data, yet, researchers are frequently reluctant to use school-level achievement data that are widely available from state websites. We argue that public-use aggregate school-level achievement data are, in fact, sufficient to address a wide range of evaluation questions…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Data, Information Utilization, Educational Assessment
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Culpepper, Steven Andrew – Applied Psychological Measurement, 2012
Measurement error significantly biases interaction effects and distorts researchers' inferences regarding interactive hypotheses. This article focuses on the single-indicator case and shows how to accurately estimate group slope differences by disattenuating interaction effects with errors-in-variables (EIV) regression. New analytic findings were…
Descriptors: Evidence, Test Length, Interaction, Regression (Statistics)
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Culpepper, Steven Andrew – Psychometrika, 2012
The study of prediction bias is important and the last five decades include research studies that examined whether test scores differentially predict academic or employment performance. Previous studies used ordinary least squares (OLS) to assess whether groups differ in intercepts and slopes. This study shows that OLS yields inaccurate inferences…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Prediction, Measurement, Least Squares Statistics
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Raymond, Mark R.; Clauser, Brian E.; Furman, Gail E. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2010
The use of standardized patients to assess communication skills is now an essential part of assessing a physician's readiness for practice. To improve the reliability of communication scores, it has become increasingly common in recent years to use statistical models to adjust ratings provided by standardized patients. This study employed ordinary…
Descriptors: Generalizability Theory, Physicians, Patients, Least Squares Statistics
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Kim, Seonghoon – Applied Psychological Measurement, 2010
The three types (generalized, unweighted, and weighted) of least squares methods, proposed by Ogasawara, for estimating item response theory (IRT) linking coefficients under dichotomous models are extended to the graded response model. A simulation study was conducted to confirm the accuracy of the extended formulas, and a real data study was…
Descriptors: Least Squares Statistics, Computation, Item Response Theory, Models
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Rhemtulla, Mijke; Brosseau-Liard, Patricia E.; Savalei, Victoria – Psychological Methods, 2012
A simulation study compared the performance of robust normal theory maximum likelihood (ML) and robust categorical least squares (cat-LS) methodology for estimating confirmatory factor analysis models with ordinal variables. Data were generated from 2 models with 2-7 categories, 4 sample sizes, 2 latent distributions, and 5 patterns of category…
Descriptors: Factor Analysis, Computation, Simulation, Sample Size
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Forero, Carlos G.; Maydeu-Olivares, Alberto; Gallardo-Pujol, David – Structural Equation Modeling: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2009
Factor analysis models with ordinal indicators are often estimated using a 3-stage procedure where the last stage involves obtaining parameter estimates by least squares from the sample polychoric correlations. A simulation study involving 324 conditions (1,000 replications per condition) was performed to compare the performance of diagonally…
Descriptors: Factor Analysis, Models, Least Squares Statistics, Computation
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Schochet, Peter Z. – National Center for Education Evaluation and Regional Assistance, 2009
For RCTs of education interventions, it is often of interest to estimate associations between student and mediating teacher practice outcomes, to examine the extent to which the study's conceptual model is supported by the data, and to identify specific mediators that are most associated with student learning. This paper develops statistical power…
Descriptors: Statistical Analysis, Intervention, Teacher Influence, Teaching Methods
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