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E-raamat: Quantitative Psychology: The 82nd Annual Meeting of the Psychometric Society, Zurich, Switzerland, 2017

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This proceedings book highlights the latest research and developments in psychometrics and statistics. Featuring contributions presented at the 82nd Annual Meeting of the Psychometric Society (IMPS), organized by the University of Zurich and held in Zurich, Switzerland from July 17 to 21, 2017, its 34 chapters address a diverse range of psychometric topics including item response theory, factor analysis, causal inference, Bayesian statistics, test equating, cognitive diagnostic models and multistage adaptive testing.





The IMPS is one of the largest international meetings on quantitative measurement in psychology, education and the social sciences, attracting over 500 participants and 250 paper presentations from around the world every year. This book gathers the contributions of selected presenters, which were subsequently expanded and peer-reviewed.
Optimal Scores as an Alternative to Sum Scores
1(10)
Marie Wiberg
James O. Ramsay
Juan Li
Disentangling Treatment and Placebo Effects in Randomized Experiments Using Principal Stratification---An Introduction
11(14)
Reagan Mozer
Rob Kessels
Donald B. Rubin
Some Measures of the Amount of Adaptation for Computerized Adaptive Tests
25(16)
Mark D. Reckase
Unhee Ju
Sewon Kim
Investigating the Constrained-Weighted Item Selection Methods for CD-CAT
41(14)
Ya-Hui Su
Modeling Accidental Mistakes in Multistage Testing: A Simulation Study
55(12)
Thales A. M. Ricarte
Mariana Curi
Alina A. von Davier
On the Usefulness of Interrater Reliability Coefficients
67(10)
Debby ten Hove
Terrence D. Jorgensen
L. Andries van der Ark
An Evaluation of Rater Agreement Indices Using Generalizability Theory
77(14)
Dongmei Li
Qing Yi
Benjamin Andrews
How to Select the Bandwidth in Kernel Equating---An Evaluation of Five Different Methods
91(10)
Gabriel Wallin
Jenny Haggstrom
Marie Wiberg
Evaluating Equating Transformations from Different Frameworks
101(10)
Waldir Leoncio
Marie Wiberg
Ah Alternative View on the NEAT Design in Test Equating
111(10)
Jorge Gonzalez
Ernesto San Martin
Simultaneous Equating of Multiple Forms
121(10)
Michela Battauz
Incorporating Information Functions in IRT Scaling
131(16)
Alexander Weissman
Reducing Conditional Error Variance Differences in IRT Scaling
147(16)
Tammy J. Trierweiler
Charles Lewis
Robert L. Smith
An IRT Analysis of the Growth Mindset Scale
163(12)
Brooke Midkiff
Michelle Langer
Cynthia Demetriou
A. T. Panter
Considering Local Dependencies: Person Parameter Estimation for IRT Models of Forced-Choice Data
175(8)
Safir Yousfi
Elimination Scoring Versus Correction for Guessing: A Simulation Study
183(12)
Qian Wu
Tinne De Laet
Rianne Janssen
Three-Way Generalized Structured Component Analysis
195(16)
Ji Yeh Choi
Seungmi Yang
Arthur Tenenhaus
Heungsun Hwang
Combining Factors from Different Factor Analyses Based on Factor Congruence
211(10)
Aniko Lovik
Vahid Nassiri
Geert Verbeke
Geert Molenberghs
On the Bias in Eigenvalues of Sample Co variance Matrix
221(14)
Kentaro Hayashi
Ke-Hai Yuan
Lu Liang
Using Product Indicators in Restricted Factor Analysis Models to Detect Nonuniform Measurement Bias
235(12)
Laura Kolbe
Terrence D. Jorgensen
Polychoric Correlations for Ordered Categories Using the EM Algorithm
247(14)
Kenpei Shiina
Takashi Ueda
Saori Kubo
A Structural Equation Modeling Approach to Canonical Correlation Analysis
261(14)
Zhenqiu (Laura) Lu
Fei Gu
Dealing with Person Differential Item Functioning in Social-Emotional Skill Assessment Using Anchoring Vignettes
275(12)
Ricardo Primi
Daniel Santos
Oliver P. John
Filip De Fruyt
Nelson Hauck-Filho
Random Permutation Tests of Nonuniform Differential Item Functioning in Multigroup Item Factor Analysis
287(10)
Benjamin A. Kite
Terrence D. Jorgensen
Po-Yi Chen
Using Credible Intervals to Detect Differential Item Functioning in IRT Models
297(8)
Ya-Hui Su
Joyce Chang
Henghsiu Tsai
Bayesian Network for Modeling Uncertainty in Attribute Hierarchy
305(14)
Lihong Song
Wenyi Wang
Haiqi Dai
Shuliang Ding
A Cognitive Diagnosis Method Based on Mahalanobis Distance
319(16)
Jianhua Xiong
Fen Luo
Shuliang Ding
Huiqiong Duan
An Joint Maximum Likelihood Estimation Approach to Cognitive Diagnosis Models
335(16)
Youn Seon Lim
Fritz Drasgow
An Exploratory Discrete Factor Loading Method for Q-Matrix Specification in Cognitive Diagnostic Models
351(12)
Wenyi Wang
Lihong Song
Shuliang Ding
Identifiability of the Latent Attribute Space and Conditions of Q-Matrix Completeness for Attribute Hierarchy Models
363(14)
Hans-Friedrich Kohn
Chia-Yi Chiu
Different Expressions of a Knowledge State and Their Applications
377(8)
Shuliang Ding
Fen Luo
Wenyi Wang
Jianhua Xiong
Heiqiong Duan
Lihong Song
Accuracy and Reliability of Autoregressive Parameter Estimates: A Comparison Between Person-Specific and Multilevel Modeling Approaches
385(10)
Siwei Liu
A Two-Factor State Theory
395(12)
John Tisak
Guido Alessandri
Marie S. Tisak
SPARK: A New Clustering Algorithm for Obtaining Sparse and Interpretable Centroids
407
Naoto Yamashita
Kohei Adachi
Marie Wiberg is a Professor of Statistics with a specialty in psychometrics at Umeå University, Sweden. Her research interests include test equating, applied statistics, large-scale assessments and psychometrics in general.





Steven Culpepper is an Associate Professor at the Department of Statistics, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. His research interests include Bayesian statistics, cognitive diagnosis, large-scale assessments and psychometrics in general.





Rianne Janssen is an Associate Professor at the Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences, KU Leuven in Belgium. She is chiefly interested in educational measurement and psychometrics, especially for applications in large-scale student assessments.





Jorge González is an Associate Professor at the Faculty of Mathematics, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile. His research interests include statistical modeling of social sciences data, particularly in the fields ofeducational measurement and psychometrics.





Dylan Molenaar is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Psychology, University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands, where he received his PhD degree in Psychology in 2012 for a thesis on "Testing distributional assumptions in psychometric measurement models with substantive applications in psychology." His research interests include item response theory, factor analysis, response time modeling, mixture modeling, modeling of intelligence test data, and modeling of genotype by means of environmental interactions.