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Rindskopf, David; Strauss, Shiela – Structural Equation Modeling, 2004
We demonstrate a model for categorical data that parallels the MIMIC model for continuous data. The model is equivalent to a latent class model with observed covariates; further, it includes simple handling of missing data. The model is used on data from a large-scale study of HIV that had both biological measures of infection and self-report…
Descriptors: Sexually Transmitted Diseases, Communicable Diseases, Predictor Variables, Error of Measurement
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Onwuegbuzie, Anthony J.; Roberts, J. Kyle; Daniel, Larry G. – Measurement and Evaluation in Counseling and Development, 2005
In this article, the authors (a) illustrate how displaying disattenuated correlation coefficients alongside their unadjusted counterparts will allow researchers to assess the impact of unreliability on bivariate relationships and (b) demonstrate how a proposed new "what if reliability" analysis can complement null hypothesis significance…
Descriptors: Correlation, Statistical Significance, Reliability, Error of Measurement
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Marcus, Gary F. – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2004
"Little by little, the child develops," wrote an undergraduate in a friend's cognitive development class, and so, for the most part, it is. But what explains the U's of cognitive development? Namy, Campbell, and Tomasello and Cashon and Cohen take a standard approach to understanding U-shaped curves: as the product of a mix of different cognitive…
Descriptors: Measurement Techniques, Error of Measurement, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Development
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Yuan, Ke-Hai; Maxwell, Scott – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2005
Retrospective or post hoc power analysis is recommended by reviewers and editors of many journals. Little literature has been found that gave a serious study of the post hoc power. When the sample size is large, the observed effect size is a good estimator of the true power. This article studies whether such a power estimator provides valuable…
Descriptors: Effect Size, Computation, Monte Carlo Methods, Bias
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Charles, Eric P. – Psychological Methods, 2005
The correction for attenuation due to measurement error (CAME) has received many historical criticisms, most of which can be traced to the limited ability to use CAME inferentially. Past attempts to determine confidence intervals for CAME are summarized and their limitations discussed. The author suggests that inference requires confidence sets…
Descriptors: Error of Measurement, Error Correction, Intervals, Inferences
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Adams, Raymond J. – Studies in Educational Evaluation, 2005
Test reliability is a concept central to classical test theory and it is commonly stated as a requirement that a test attain a certain level of reliability before it be considered of sufficient quality for practical use. This article discusses the role of reliability in item response theory, and in particular the role of reliability in contexts…
Descriptors: Test Reliability, Error of Measurement, Item Sampling, Item Response Theory
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Qian, Jiahe – ETS Research Report Series, 2006
Weighting and variance estimation are two statistical issues involved in survey data analysis for large-scale assessment programs such as the Higher Education Information and Communication Technology (ICT) Literacy Assessment. Because survey data are always acquired by probability sampling, to draw unbiased or almost unbiased inferences for the…
Descriptors: Weighted Scores, Sampling, Statistical Analysis, Higher Education
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van der Linden, Wim J. – Applied Psychological Measurement, 2006
Traditionally, error in equating observed scores on two versions of a test is defined as the difference between the transformations that equate the quantiles of their distributions in the sample and population of test takers. But it is argued that if the goal of equating is to adjust the scores of test takers on one version of the test to make…
Descriptors: Equated Scores, Evaluation Criteria, Models, Error of Measurement
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Song, Xin-Yuan; Lee, Sik-Yum – Structural Equation Modeling: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2006
Structural equation models are widely appreciated in social-psychological research and other behavioral research to model relations between latent constructs and manifest variables and to control for measurement error. Most applications of SEMs are based on fully observed continuous normal data and models with a linear structural equation.…
Descriptors: Structural Equation Models, Maximum Likelihood Statistics, Item Response Theory, Error of Measurement
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Molleman, Gerard R. M.; Peters, Louk W. H.; Hosman, Clemens M. H.; Kok, Gerjo J.; Oosterveld, Paul – Health Education Research, 2006
Preffi 2.0 is an evidence-based Dutch quality assessment instrument for health promotion interventions. It is mainly intended for both planning and assessing one's own projects but can also be used to assess other people's projects (external use). This article reports a study on the reliability of Preffi as an external quality assessment…
Descriptors: Expertise, Evidence, Generalizability Theory, Health Promotion
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Zinbarg, Richard E.; Yovel, Iftah; Revelle, William; McDonald, Roderick P. – Applied Psychological Measurement, 2006
The extent to which a scale score generalizes to a latent variable common to all of the scale's indicators is indexed by the scale's general factor saturation. Seven techniques for estimating this parameter--omega[hierarchical] (omega[subscript h])--are compared in a series of simulated data sets. Primary comparisons were based on 160 artificial…
Descriptors: Computation, Factor Analysis, Reliability, Correlation
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de la Torre, Jimmy; Stark, Stephen; Chernyshenko, Oleksandr S. – Applied Psychological Measurement, 2006
The authors present a Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) parameter estimation procedure for the generalized graded unfolding model (GGUM) and compare it to the marginal maximum likelihood (MML) approach implemented in the GGUM2000 computer program, using simulated and real personality data. In the simulation study, test length, number of response…
Descriptors: Computation, Monte Carlo Methods, Markov Processes, Item Response Theory
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Seco, Guillermo Vallejo; Izquierdo, Marcelino Cuesta; Garcia, M. Paula Fernandez; Diez, F. Javier Herrero – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 2006
The authors compare the operating characteristics of the bootstrap-F approach, a direct extension of the work of Berkovits, Hancock, and Nevitt, with Huynh's improved general approximation (IGA) and the Brown-Forsythe (BF) multivariate approach in a mixed repeated measures design when normality and multisample sphericity assumptions do not hold.…
Descriptors: Sample Size, Comparative Analysis, Simulation, Multivariate Analysis
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Oranje, Andreas; Freund, David; Lin, Mei-jang; Tang, Yuxin – ETS Research Report Series, 2007
In this paper, a data perturbation method for minimizing the possibility of disclosure of participants' identities on a survey is described in the context of the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP). The method distinguishes itself from most approaches because of the presence of cognitive tasks. Hence, a data edit should have minimal…
Descriptors: Student Surveys, Risk, National Competency Tests, Data Analysis
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Titus, Marvin A. – Research in Higher Education, 2007
Most research in the area of higher education is plagued by the problem of endogeneity or self-selection bias. Unlike ordinary least squares (OLS) regression, propensity score matching addresses the issue of self-selection bias and allows for a decomposition of treatment effects on outcomes. Using panel data from a national survey of bachelor's…
Descriptors: Least Squares Statistics, Outcomes of Education, Graduate Surveys, Education Work Relationship
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