Students' approaches to learning in a clinical practicum: A psychometric evaluation based on item response theory

2018 ◽  
Vol 66 ◽  
pp. 179-186 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yue Zhao ◽  
Hoi Kei Kuan ◽  
Joyce O.K. Chung ◽  
Cecilia K.Y. Chan ◽  
William H.C. Li
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah Bauermeister ◽  
John Gallacher

Abstract Background Neuroticism has been described as a broad and pervasive personality dimension or ‘heterogeneous’ trait measuring components of mood instability such as worry; anxiety; irritability; moodiness; self-consciousness; sadness and irritabililty. Consistent with depression and anxiety-related disorders, increased neuroticism places an individual vulnerable for other unipolar and bipolar mood disorders. However, the measurement of neuroticism remains a challenge. Our aim was to identify psychometrically efficient items and inform the inclusion of redundant items across the 12-item EPQ-R Neuroticism scale using Item Response Theory (IRT). Methods The 12-item binary EPQ-R Neuroticism scale was evaluated by estimating a two-parameter (2-PL) IRT model on data from 502,591 UK Biobank participants aged 37 to 73 years (M = 56.53 years; SD = 8.05), 54% female. Models were run listwise (n= 401,648) and post-estimation mathematical assumptions were computed. All analyses were conducted in STATA 16 SE on the Dementias Platform UK (DPUK) Data Portal. Results A plot of θ values (Item Information functions) showed that most items clustered around the mid-range where discrimination values ranged from 1.34 to 2.28. Difficulty values for individual item θ scores ranged from -0.13 to 1.41. A Mokken analysis suggested a weak to medium level of monotonicity between the items, no items reach strong scalability (H=0.35-0.47). Systematic item deletions and rescaling found that an 7-item scale is more efficient and with information (discrimination) ranging from 1.56 to 2.57 and stronger range of scalability (H=0.47-0.52). A 3-item scale is highly discriminatory but offers a narrow range of person ability (difficulty). A logistic regression differential item function (DIF) analysis exposed significant gender item bias functioning uniformly across all versions of the scale. Conclusions Across 401,648 UK Biobank participants, the 12-item EPQ-R neuroticism scale exhibited psychometric inefficiency with poor discrimination at the extremes of the scale-range. High and low scores are relatively poorly represented and uninformative suggesting that high neuroticism scores derived from the EPQ-R are a function of cumulative mid-range values. The scale also shows evidence of gender item bias and future scale development should consider the former along with item deletions.


Author(s):  
Irfan Ullah ◽  
Muhammad Junaid Tahir ◽  
Sajjad Ali ◽  
Rabia Waseem ◽  
Mark D. Griffiths ◽  
...  

Abstract The Fear of COVID-19 Scale (FCV-19S) assesses the fear of the novel coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) and has been translated and validated into over 20 languages. The present study conducted confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) and item response theory (IRT) analyses on the FCV-19S among a sample of 937 Pakistani adults (mean [SD] age of 25.83 [11.80] years; 537 [57.3%] females). The CFA and IRT confirmed the unidimensionality of the FCV-19S. The Likert-type scale used in the FCV-19S was supported by the proper threshold orderings. Additionally, no DIF contrast had an absolute value larger than 0.5 regarding the participants’ characteristics of gender, age, living status, and education in the IRT findings. The FCV-19S was found to be valid and reliable with strong psychometric properties among the Pakistani adult population.


Medical Care ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 52 (4) ◽  
pp. 354-361 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adam C. Carle ◽  
Pascal Jean-Pierre ◽  
Paul Winters ◽  
Patricia Valverde ◽  
Kristen Wells ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Milena D Anatchkova ◽  
Constance Barysauskas ◽  
Rebecca L Kinney ◽  
Lisa Lombardini ◽  
Jeroan J Allison

Objective: Quality of transitional care is associated with important health outcomes such as rehospitalization, increased medical errors, and costs. A widely used measure of the construct, the Care Transitions Measure (CTM-15), was developed and validated with relatively small samples and classical test theory approach. The short version of the measure (CTM-3) was recently included in the CAHPS® Hospital Survey. We aimed to conduct a psychometric evaluation of the CTM-15 in a large sample and evaluate whether an item response theory (IRT) based scoring would lead to better measurement precision. Methods: As part of TRACE-CORE 1545 participants were interviewed during hospitalization for ACS providing information on general health status (SF-36). At 1 month following discharge, patients completed CTM items, health utilization and care process questions. We evaluated the psychometric properties of the CTM using descriptive statistics, factor analyses, and item response theory analyses. We compared the measurement precision of CTM-15, CTM-3, and a CTM-IRT based score using relative validity (RV) coefficients. Results: Participants were 79% non-Hispanic white, 67% male, 27% with a college education or higher (27%) and average age of 62 years. The CTM scale had good internal consistency (Cronbach’s alpha=0.95), but demonstrated strong acquiescence bias (8.7% participants responded “Strongly agree”, 19% “Agree” to all 15 items) and limited score variability (5% <50score). A bi-factor model with one general factor with high item loadings and four secondary factors with lower item loadings, fit the data best supporting the assumption of essential unidimensionality of the measure. Review of item characteristic curves indicated presence of non-discriminating response categories in all items. IRT based item parameters were estimated for all items, but for five of the items there was evidence for model misfit. The CTM-15 differentiated between groups of patients defined by self-reported health status, health care utilization, and care transition process indicators. Differences between groups were small (2-3 points). There was no gain in measurement precision for the scale from IRT scoring. The CTM-3 was not significantly lower for patients reporting rehospitalization or emergency department visits. Conclusion: We identified psychometric challenges of the CTM, which may limit its value in research and practice. The strong acquiescence bias in the measure leads to highly skewed, clustered scores with restricted score variance and makes it difficult to differentiate between levels of care transition quality. In the absence of guidelines on meaningfully important differences, it is hard to determine whether detected statistically significant differences in care transition quality are important. These results are in line with emerging evidence of gaps in the validity of the measure.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah Bauermeister ◽  
John Gallacher

AbstractBackgroundNeuroticism has been described as a broad and pervasive personality dimension or ‘heterogeneous’ trait measuring components of mood instability such as worry; anxiety; irritability; moodiness; self-consciousness; sadness and irritabililty. Consistent with depression and anxiety-related disorders, increased neuroticism places an individual vulnerable for other unipolar and bipolar mood disorders. However, the measurement of neuroticism remains a challenge. Our aim was to identify psychometrically efficient items and inform the inclusion of redundant items across the 12-item EPQ-R Neuroticism scale using Item Response Theory (IRT).MethodsThe 12-item binary EPQ-R Neuroticism scale was evaluated by estimating a two-parameter (2-PL) IRT model on data from 502,591 UK Biobank participants aged 37 to 73 years (M = 56.53 years; SD = 8.05), 54% female. Models were run listwise (n= 401,648) and post-estimation mathematical assumptions were computed. All analyses were conducted in STATA 16 SE on the Dementias Platform UK (DPUK) Data Portal.ResultsA plot of θ values (Item Information functions) showed that most items clustered around the mid-range where discrimination values ranged from 1.34 to 2.28. Difficulty values for individual item θ scores ranged from −0.13 to 1.41. A Mokken analysis suggested a weak to medium level of monotonicity between the items, no items reach strong scalability (H=0.35-0.47). Systematic item deletions and rescaling found that an 7-item scale is more efficient and with information (discrimination) ranging from 1.56 to 2.57 and stronger range of scalability (H=0.47-0.52). A 3-item scale is highly discriminatory but offers a narrow range of person ability (difficulty). A logistic regression differential item function (DIF) analysis exposed significant gender item bias functioning uniformly across all versions of the scale.ConclusionsAcross 401,648 UK Biobank participants, the 12-item EPQ-R neuroticism scale exhibited psychometric inefficiency with poor discrimination at the extremes of the scale-range. High and low scores are relatively poorly represented and uninformative suggesting that high neuroticism scores derived from the EPQ-R are a function of cumulative mid-range values. The scale also shows evidence of gender item bias and future scale development should consider the former along with item deletions.


2001 ◽  
Vol 46 (6) ◽  
pp. 629-632
Author(s):  
Robert J. Mislevy

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