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Showing 46 to 60 of 265 results Save | Export
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Savalei, Victoria; Rhemtulla, Mijke – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2017
In many modeling contexts, the variables in the model are linear composites of the raw items measured for each participant; for instance, regression and path analysis models rely on scale scores, and structural equation models often use parcels as indicators of latent constructs. Currently, no analytic estimation method exists to appropriately…
Descriptors: Computation, Statistical Analysis, Test Items, Maximum Likelihood Statistics
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Ranger, Jochen; Kuhn, Jörg-Tobias – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 2016
In this article, a new model for test response times is proposed that combines latent class analysis and the proportional hazards model with random effects in a similar vein as the mixture factor model. The model assumes the existence of different latent classes. In each latent class, the response times are distributed according to a…
Descriptors: Reaction Time, Models, Multivariate Analysis, Goodness of Fit
Lockwood, J. R.; Castellano, Katherine E.; Shear, Benjamin R. – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2018
This article proposes a flexible extension of the Fay--Herriot model for making inferences from coarsened, group-level achievement data, for example, school-level data consisting of numbers of students falling into various ordinal performance categories. The model builds on the heteroskedastic ordered probit (HETOP) framework advocated by Reardon,…
Descriptors: Bayesian Statistics, Mathematical Models, Statistical Inference, Computation
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Liu, Chen-Wei; Wang, Wen-Chung – Journal of Educational Measurement, 2017
The examinee-selected-item (ESI) design, in which examinees are required to respond to a fixed number of items in a given set of items (e.g., choose one item to respond from a pair of items), always yields incomplete data (i.e., only the selected items are answered and the others have missing data) that are likely nonignorable. Therefore, using…
Descriptors: Item Response Theory, Models, Maximum Likelihood Statistics, Data Analysis
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Finch, Holmes – Psicologica: International Journal of Methodology and Experimental Psychology, 2017
Multilevel models (MLMs) have proven themselves to be very useful in social science research, as data from a variety of sources is sampled such that individuals at level-1 are nested within clusters such as schools, hospitals, counseling centers, and business entities at level-2. MLMs using restricted maximum likelihood estimation (REML) provide…
Descriptors: Hierarchical Linear Modeling, Comparative Analysis, Computation, Robustness (Statistics)
Carpenter, Bob; Gelman, Andrew; Hoffman, Matthew D.; Lee, Daniel; Goodrich, Ben; Betancourt, Michael; Brubaker, Marcus A.; Guo, Jiqiang; Li, Peter; Riddell, Allen – Grantee Submission, 2017
Stan is a probabilistic programming language for specifying statistical models. A Stan program imperatively defines a log probability function over parameters conditioned on specified data and constants. As of version 2.14.0, Stan provides full Bayesian inference for continuous-variable models through Markov chain Monte Carlo methods such as the…
Descriptors: Programming Languages, Probability, Bayesian Statistics, Monte Carlo Methods
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Boedeker, Peter – Practical Assessment, Research & Evaluation, 2017
Hierarchical linear modeling (HLM) is a useful tool when analyzing data collected from groups. There are many decisions to be made when constructing and estimating a model in HLM including which estimation technique to use. Three of the estimation techniques available when analyzing data with HLM are maximum likelihood, restricted maximum…
Descriptors: Hierarchical Linear Modeling, Maximum Likelihood Statistics, Bayesian Statistics, Computation
Potgieter, Cornelis; Kamata, Akihito; Kara, Yusuf – Grantee Submission, 2017
This study proposes a two-part model that includes components for reading accuracy and reading speed. The speed component is a log-normal factor model, for which speed data are measured by reading time for each sentence being assessed. The accuracy component is a binomial-count factor model, where the accuracy data are measured by the number of…
Descriptors: Reading Rate, Oral Reading, Accuracy, Models
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Sinharay, Sandip – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2015
The maximum likelihood estimate (MLE) of the ability parameter of an item response theory model with known item parameters was proved to be asymptotically normally distributed under a set of regularity conditions for tests involving dichotomous items and a unidimensional ability parameter (Klauer, 1990; Lord, 1983). This article first considers…
Descriptors: Item Response Theory, Maximum Likelihood Statistics, Test Items, Ability
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Leckie, George – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2018
The traditional approach to estimating the consistency of school effects across subject areas and the stability of school effects across time is to fit separate value-added multilevel models to each subject or cohort and to correlate the resulting empirical Bayes predictions. We show that this gives biased correlations and these biases cannot be…
Descriptors: Value Added Models, Reliability, Statistical Bias, Computation
Oluwalana, Olasumbo O. – ProQuest LLC, 2019
A primary purpose of cognitive diagnosis models (CDMs) is to classify examinees based on their attribute patterns. The Q-matrix (Tatsuoka, 1985), a common component of all CDMs, specifies the relationship between the set of required dichotomous attributes and the test items. Since a Q-matrix is often developed by content-knowledge experts and can…
Descriptors: Classification, Validity, Test Items, International Assessment
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Veroniki, Areti Angeliki; Jackson, Dan; Viechtbauer, Wolfgang; Bender, Ralf; Bowden, Jack; Knapp, Guido; Kuss, Oliver; Higgins, Julian P. T.; Langan, Dean; Salanti, Georgia – Research Synthesis Methods, 2016
Meta-analyses are typically used to estimate the overall/mean of an outcome of interest. However, inference about between-study variability, which is typically modelled using a between-study variance parameter, is usually an additional aim. The DerSimonian and Laird method, currently widely used by default to estimate the between-study variance,…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Methods, Computation, Simulation
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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Pfaffel, Andreas; Schober, Barbara; Spiel, Christiane – Practical Assessment, Research & Evaluation, 2016
A common methodological problem in the evaluation of the predictive validity of selection methods, e.g. in educational and employment selection, is that the correlation between predictor and criterion is biased. Thorndike's (1949) formulas are commonly used to correct for this biased correlation. An alternative approach is to view the selection…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Correlation, Statistical Bias, Maximum Likelihood Statistics
Ren, Chunfeng; Shin, Yongyun – Grantee Submission, 2016
In this paper, we analyze a two-level latent variable model for longitudinal data from the National Growth of Health Study where surrogate outcomes or biomarkers and covariates are subject to missingness at any of the levels. A conventional method for efficient handling of missing data is to reexpress the desired model as a joint distribution of…
Descriptors: Longitudinal Studies, Statistical Analysis, Data, Maximum Likelihood Statistics
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