Lecture 8: Measument invariance, test fairness and norms Flashcards

1
Q

What is measurement invariance (definition)?

A

interindividual differences in a (usually) continuous characteritic (intended construct) are recorded in the measured variables (items of a test) independently from any portential group membership.

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2
Q

Differential Item Functioning (DIF) - definition

A

DIF is present if an item exhibits different psychometric porperties across groups, independetly from the question if there are real differences (in the construct) between the groups.

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3
Q

If messurement invariance is teneable … (vertretbar)

A
  • group differences can be interpreted as real
  • indvidual items do not distort group differences in an uncontrolled way because of measurment error.
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4
Q

Predictive invariance (definition)

A

is present if interindividual differences in a (usually) continuous predictor are related to criterion performance independently from any group memebership.

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5
Q

Test bias (definition)

A

because of certain group membership, an individual’s chances of attaining a certain goal are no (only) related to the level of the measured characteristic.
- this included decreased and increased chances.

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6
Q

What deos a non-existence of test bias imply?

A

that every individual’s chances of attaining a certain goal are the same and only dependent on their level of the measured characteristic but independent from any other variables, such as membership in a certain group.

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7
Q

What can be causes of test bias?

A
  • tests are usually developed and produced in the language of the majority group
  • members of the majority group are more familiar with the task and item formats used in the tests.
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8
Q

What is an easy and historical idea to identify test bias?

A

identical regression slopes + intercepts (meaning no test bias)

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9
Q

How do you “build” a linear regression model?

A
  1. Predictor
  2. Predictor + group membership (usually dummy coded)
  3. Predictor + Group + Interaction
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10
Q

What are norms (definition)

A

are measurement units into which raw scores of different diagnostic measures can be transformed with the goal of making them comparable and interpretable in the context of a (preferably) representative reference group.

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11
Q

What are important characteristic of norms?

A
  1. Are needed if we want to compare test scores.
  2. Are always tied to clearly described populations.
  3. We can use group-specific norms in order to improve test fairness.
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12
Q

Variability norms

A

allow individual test scores to be classified with regard to the distribution of scores observed from a representative reference group.

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13
Q

How is a scores z-standardized?

A

z= x - x(mean)/ Sx

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14
Q

What do standard scores always have?

A
  • a mean of 0
  • and a standard deviation of 1
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15
Q

What are some commonly used scales?

A
  1. IQ = 100 +15z
  2. SV = 100 +10 z
  3. T = 50 + 10z
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16
Q

Percentile rank norms - what is special about them?

A
  • accentuate differences in the measured variables in the middle area but level them out in extreme areas.
17
Q

What are different rough norms (Grobnormen)?

A
  1. Stanine (Standard nine)
  2. Sten (standard ten)
18
Q

When are reduced (rough) norms utilized?

A
  • due to relatively low reliability of diagnostic tests, the need to employ large confidence intervals around the individual test scores
  • then reduced (rough) norms may be utilized.
19
Q

What to do in the case of deviation from normal distribution?

A
  • normalize raw scores
  • conversion of raw scores into percentile ranks
  • z-transformation of percentile ranks.
20
Q

In case of deviation from normal distribution - When is the z-transformation of percentile ranks applicable?

A
  • if the deviation from normality is not too large
  • and we can assume the measured construct is indeed distributed normally in the population.
21
Q

What are different samples types?

A
  • regional (area is divided into subgroups, and from each subgroup sb. selected)
  • quota sample (for example women and men are selected in the same amount)
22
Q

What is the case about sample size planning?

A
  • the anticipated level of reliability
  • the anticipated measurement accuracy
  • utilization of the confidence interval for individual scores.
23
Q

What is the standard error of the mean?

A

a measure of the accuracy of the estimate of the population mean

24
Q

How is the standard error of the mean calculated?

A

by dividing the unbiased estimate of the standard deviation by the square root of the sample size.

25
Q

What do group-specific norms affect?

A
  • can affect the reliability as well as validity of a test result.
  • can improve or reduce test fairness
  • operate similar to quotes
26
Q

Why are norms problematic?

A

participants are not treated equally.