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Zimmerman, Donald W. – Psychometrika, 1975
Classical test theory findings can be derived from the concepts of conditional expectation, conditional independence, and related notions. It is shown that these concepts provide precisely the formalism needed to obtain the classical results with minimal assumptions and with greatest economy in the methods of proof. (RC)
Descriptors: Career Development, Probability, Test Reliability, Test Theory
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Schulman, Robert S. – Psychometrika, 1978
Ordinal measurement is the rank ordering of individuals in a population. For ordinal measurement, the concept of an individual propensity distribution is his or her true score. Estimation of, as well as other aspects of the distribution, are discussed. (Author/JKS)
Descriptors: Correlation, Measurement, Nonparametric Statistics, Probability
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Zimmerman, Donald W. – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 1976
Using the concepts of conditional probability, conditional expectation, and conditional independence, the main results of the classical test theory model can be derived in a very few steps with minimal assumptions. The present effort explores the possibility that present classical test theories can be further condensed. (Author/RC)
Descriptors: Career Development, Correlation, Mathematical Models, Measurement
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Schulman, Robert S. – Psychometrika, 1979
An alternative to the uniform probability distribution model for ordinal data is considered. Implications for statistics and for test theory are discussed. (JKS)
Descriptors: Career Development, Correlation, Mathematical Models, Nonparametric Statistics
Livingston, Samuel A. – 1976
A distinction is made between reliability of measurement and reliability of classification; the "criterion-referenced reliability coefficient" describes the former. Application of this coefficient to the probability distribution of possible scores for a single student yields a meaningful way to describe the reliability of a single score. (Author)
Descriptors: Classification, Criterion Referenced Tests, Error of Measurement, Measurement
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Kane, Michael T.; Moloney, James M. – 1976
The Answer-Until-Correct (AUC) procedure has been proposed in order to increase the reliability of multiple-choice items. A model for examinees' behavior when they must respond to each item until they answer it correctly is presented. An expression for the reliability of AUC items, as a function of the characteristics of the item and the scoring…
Descriptors: Guessing (Tests), Item Analysis, Mathematical Models, Multiple Choice Tests