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Clark, David A.; Antony, Martin M.; Beck, Aaron T.; Swinson, Richard P.; Steer, Robert A. – Psychological Assessment, 2005
The 25-item Clark-Beck Obsessive-Compulsive Inventory (CBOCI) was developed to assess the frequency and severity of obsessive and compulsive symptoms. The measure uses a graded-response format to assess core symptom features of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) based on Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (4th ed.; American…
Descriptors: Psychometrics, Symptoms (Individual Disorders), Validity, Mental Disorders
Van Breukelen, Gerard J. P.; Vlaeyen, Johan W. S. – Psychological Assessment, 2005
Questionnaires for measuring patients' feelings or beliefs are commonly used in clinical settings for diagnostic purposes, clinical decision making, or treatment evaluation. Raw scores of a patient can be evaluated by comparing them with norms based on a reference population. Using the Pain Cognition List (PCL-2003) as an example, this article…
Descriptors: Questionnaires, Multiple Regression Analysis, Pain, Patients
Preacher, Kristopher J.; Rucker, Derek D.; MacCallum, Robert C.; Nicewander, W. Alan – Psychological Methods, 2005
Analysis of continuous variables sometimes proceeds by selecting individuals on the basis of extreme scores of a sample distribution and submitting only those extreme scores to further analysis. This sampling method is known as the extreme groups approach (EGA). EGA is often used to achieve greater statistical power in subsequent hypothesis tests.…
Descriptors: Sampling, Statistical Analysis, Reliability, Measures (Individuals)
van Abswoude, Alexandra A. H.; Vermunt, Jeroen K.; Hemker, Bas T.; van der Ark, L. Andries – Applied Psychological Measurement, 2004
Mokken scale analysis (MSA) can be used to assess and build unidimensional scales from an item pool that is sensitive to multiple dimensions. These scales satisfy a set of scaling conditions, one of which follows from the model of monotone homogeneity. An important drawback of the MSA program is that the sequential item selection and scale…
Descriptors: Measures (Individuals), Item Analysis, Item Response Theory, Item Banks
A Closer Look at Using Judgments of Item Difficulty to Change Answers on Computerized Adaptive Tests
Vispoel, Walter P.; Clough, Sara J.; Bleiler, Timothy – Journal of Educational Measurement, 2005
Recent studies have shown that restricting review and answer change opportunities on computerized adaptive tests (CATs) to items within successive blocks reduces time spent in review, satisfies most examinees' desires for review, and controls against distortion in proficiency estimates resulting from intentional incorrect answering of items prior…
Descriptors: Mathematics, Item Analysis, Adaptive Testing, Computer Assisted Testing
Lock, Timothy G.; Levis, Donald J.; Rourke, Patricia A. – Journal of Child Sexual Abuse, 2005
This paper provides the results of two studies designed to evaluate a newly constructed self-report instrument, the Sexual Abuse Questionnaire (SAQ). The SAQ was designed as a brief screening device to aid in the identification of a childhood sexual abuse history. A "unique" feature of the SAQ is the inclusion of a number of non-face…
Descriptors: Sexual Abuse, Child Abuse, Questionnaires, Adults
Erford, Bradley T. – Assessment for Effective Intervention, 2004
Technical characteristics of the Reading Essential Skill Screener--Preschool Version (RESS-P) were studied using four independent samples of boys and girls aged 3-5 years. A decision efficiency study (N = 91) resulted in a total predictive value (TPV) of .85 when compared with the criterion of teacher report/judgment of emerging literacy at-risk…
Descriptors: Early Reading, Test Validity, Test Reliability, Item Analysis
Erford, Bradley T.; Stephens, Vicki M. – Measurement and Evaluation in Counseling and Development, 2005
Technical characteristics of the Reading Essential Skills Screener-Elementary Version (RESS-E; B. T. Erford, G. Vitali, R. Haas, & R. R. Boykin, 1995) were studied using 4 independent samples of boys and girls between the ages of 6 and 8 years. Evidence of internal consistency, test-retest reliability, decision efficiency, factorial validity,…
Descriptors: Validity, Test Reliability, Reading Skills, Screening Tests
Germain, Marie-Line – Online Submission, 2006
This paper chronicles the steps, methods, and presents hypothetical results of quantitative and qualitative studies being conducted to develop a Generalized Expertise Measure (GEM). Per Hinkin (1995), the stages of scale development are domain and item generation, content expert validation, and pilot test. Content/face validity and internal…
Descriptors: Psychometrics, Test Validity, Measures (Individuals), Research Methodology
Hurley, Kolleen E.; Deal, William Paul – Mental Retardation: A Journal of Practices, Policy and Perspectives, 2006
"Malingering," the exaggeration or fabrication of physical and/or psychological symptoms, can threaten the psychological assessment process (American Psychiatric Association, 2000). To enhance the validity of psychological evaluations, researchers have studied trends in malingering and developed instruments for its detection (Rogers, Bagby, &…
Descriptors: Measures (Individuals), Personality Traits, Mental Retardation, Symptoms (Individual Disorders)
Seaton, Eleanor K.; Scottham, Krista Maywalt; Sellers, Robert M. – Child Development, 2006
Although the identity formation model is widely used to assess adolescent ethnic identity development, the model propositions have rarely been tested. The existence of the identity statuses (diffuse, foreclosed, moratorium, achieved), the proposed developmental trajectories, and whether youth in the achieved status report higher levels of…
Descriptors: Racial Identification, Well Being, Adolescents, African Americans
Eggen, Theo J. H. M.; Verschoor, Angela J. – Applied Psychological Measurement, 2006
Computerized adaptive tests (CATs) are individualized tests that, from a measurement point of view, are optimal for each individual, possibly under some practical conditions. In the present study, it is shown that maximum information item selection in CATs using an item bank that is calibrated with the one- or the two-parameter logistic model…
Descriptors: Adaptive Testing, Difficulty Level, Test Items, Item Response Theory
Waber, Dietmar – Education Canada, 2006
The article focuses on Fraser Institute's (Vancouver, British Columbia) "Report Card on Elementary Schools in British Columbia." The rating of a school is based on reading, writing, and numeracy levels for both Grade 4 and Grade 7 students, gender differences in reading and numeracy in Grade 7, and the percentage of students not meeting…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Examiners, Report Cards, Reading
DeMars, Christine E. – Journal of Educational Measurement, 2006
Four item response theory (IRT) models were compared using data from tests where multiple items were grouped into testlets focused on a common stimulus. In the bi-factor model each item was treated as a function of a primary trait plus a nuisance trait due to the testlet; in the testlet-effects model the slopes in the direction of the testlet…
Descriptors: Item Response Theory, Reliability, Item Analysis, Factor Analysis
Steger, Michael F.; Frazier, Patricia; Oishi, Shigehiro; Kaler, Matthew – Journal of Counseling Psychology, 2006
Counseling psychologists often work with clients to increase their well-being as well as to decrease their distress. One important aspect of well-being, highlighted particularly in humanistic theories of the counseling process, is perceived meaning in life. However, poor measurement has hampered research on meaning in life. In 3 studies, evidence…
Descriptors: Counseling Psychology, Well Being, Factor Structure, Validity

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