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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

A Monte Carlo Study Investigating the Influence of Item Discrimination, Category Intersection Parameters, and Differential Item Functioning in Polytomous Items

Thurman, Carol Jenetha 21 October 2009 (has links)
The increased use of polytomous item formats has led assessment developers to pay greater attention to the detection of differential item functioning (DIF) in these items. DIF occurs when an item performs differently for two contrasting groups of respondents (e.g., males versus females) after controlling for differences in the abilities of the groups. Determining whether the difference in performance on an item between two demographic groups is due to between group differences in ability or some form of unfairness in the item is a more complex task for a polytomous item, because of its many score categories, than for a dichotomous item. Effective DIF detection methods must be able to locate DIF within each of these various score categories. The Mantel, Generalized Mantel Haenszel (GMH), and Logistic Regression (LR) are three of several DIF detection methods that are able to test for DIF in polytomous items. There have been relatively few studies on the effectiveness of polytomous procedures to detect DIF; and of those studies, only a very small percentage have examined the efficiency of the Mantel, GMH, and LR procedures when item discrimination magnitudes and category intersection parameters vary and when there are different patterns of DIF (e.g., balanced versus constant) within score categories. This Monte Carlo simulation study compared the Type I error and power of the Mantel, GMH, and OLR (LR method for ordinal data) procedures when variation occurred in 1) the item discrimination parameters, 2) category intersection parameters, 3) DIF patterns within score categories, and 4) the average latent traits between the reference and focal groups. Results of this investigation showed that high item discrimination levels were directly related to increased DIF detection rates. The location of the difficulty parameters was also found to have a direct effect on DIF detection rates. Additionally, depending on item difficulty, DIF magnitudes and patterns within score categories were found to impact DIF detection rates and finally, DIF detection power increased as DIF magnitudes became larger. The GMH outperformed the Mantel and OLR and is recommended for use with polytomous data when the item discrimination varies across items.

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