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A Monte Carlo study of the effects of four factors on the effectiveness of the LZ and ECIZ4 appropriateness indices.

While a test score may be valid for a group there may sometimes be reason to suspect its validity for an individual. Unusual examinee response patterns may indicate that the test may be invalid for the individual and quantitative measures called appropriateness indices have been developed to detect these unusual patterns. For a number of reasons, Lz and ECIZ4 have so far proven to be two of the most useful of these indices. There were three purposes for this study. The first purpose was to investigate the effects of four variables on the cutoff values of the indices: the range of the distribution of the b parameter (Diff), the level of the a parameter (Disc), IRT model (Model), and sample size used to estimate item parameters (Sampsiz). The second purpose was to investigate the effects of these same variables on the detection rates for response vectors that were made spuriously high(i.e. high aberrance) and for response vectors that were made spuriously low (i.e. low aberrance). The third purpose was to determine the extent to which detection rates obtained by using cutoff values from the standard normal distribution were similar to those obtained by using cutoff values obtained by simulating non-aberrant response vectors. Two levels were set for each of the four variables. For Diff, a broad and a narrow range of the b parameter was used. For Disc, a high and low level for the a parameter of the test items was used. For Model, the 2PL and 3PL models were used. For Sampsiz, a sample size of 1000 and 2500 was used to estimate item parameters. For each of the 16 combinations of these variables, non-aberrant as well as aberrant response vectors were simulated for a 60 item test. For the aberrant response vectors, both high and low aberrance was created by modifying ten of the test items. Detection rates were obtained at the.01,.05, and.10 false-positive rates using cutoff values based on the distribution of the non-aberrant response vectors and using cutoff values based on a standard normal distribution. The simulation of each combination of conditions was replicated 90 times. (Abstract shortened by UMI.)

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:uottawa.ca/oai:ruor.uottawa.ca:10393/6538
Date January 1994
CreatorsCole, Gary.
ContributorsBoss, Marvin,
PublisherUniversity of Ottawa (Canada)
Source SetsUniversité d’Ottawa
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
Format132 p.

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