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William R. Nugent – Measurement: Interdisciplinary Research and Perspectives, 2024
Symmetry considerations are important in science, and Group Theory is a theory of symmetry. Classical Measurement Theory is the most used measurement theory in the social and behavioral sciences. In this article, the author uses Matrix Lie (Lee) group theory to formulate a measurement model. Symmetry is defined and illustrated using symmetries of…
Descriptors: Item Response Theory, Measurement Techniques, Models, Simulation
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Raykov, Tenko; Marcoulides, George A. – Measurement: Interdisciplinary Research and Perspectives, 2023
This article outlines a readily applicable procedure for point and interval estimation of the population discrepancy between reliability and the popular Cronbach's coefficient alpha for unidimensional multi-component measuring instruments with uncorrelated errors, which are widely used in behavioral and social research. The method is developed…
Descriptors: Measurement, Test Reliability, Measurement Techniques, Error of Measurement
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Najera, Hector – Measurement: Interdisciplinary Research and Perspectives, 2023
Measurement error affects the quality of population orderings of an index and, hence, increases the misclassification of the poor and the non-poor groups and affects statistical inferences from binary regression models. Hence, the conclusions about the extent, profile, and distribution of poverty are likely to be misleading. However, the size and…
Descriptors: Poverty, Error of Measurement, Classification, Statistical Inference
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Reimers, Jennifer; Turner, Ronna C.; Tendeiro, Jorge N.; Lo, Wen-Juo; Keiffer, Elizabeth – Measurement: Interdisciplinary Research and Perspectives, 2023
Person-fit analyses are commonly used to detect aberrant responding in self-report data. Nonparametric person fit statistics do not require fitting a parametric test theory model and have performed well compared to other person-fit statistics. However, detection of aberrant responding has primarily focused on dominance response data, thus the…
Descriptors: Goodness of Fit, Nonparametric Statistics, Error of Measurement, Comparative Analysis
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Maris, Gunter; Schmittmann, Verena D.; Borsboom, Denny – Measurement: Interdisciplinary Research and Perspectives, 2010
Test equating under the NEAT design is, at best, a necessary evil. At bottom, the procedure aims to reach a conclusion on what a tested person would have done, if he or she were administered a set of items that were in fact never administered. It is not possible to infer such a conclusion from the data, because one simply has not made the required…
Descriptors: Equated Scores, Inferences, Item Response Theory, Error of Measurement