L4 Reliability Flashcards

1
Q

How many Cronbach’s alpha assumptions?

A

4

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2
Q

Cronbach’s alpha assumption 1

A

-items are essentially tau-equivalent (each item is an equally strong indicator of the true score scores, but they may differ by a constant. Items can have different means)

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3
Q

Cronbach’s Alpha Assumption 2

A

Each item’s error term is uncorrelated with every other item’s error term.

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4
Q

Cronbach’s Alpha Assumption 3

A

-The error scores are uncorrelated with the true scores. (Assumption associated with all forms of reliability).

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5
Q

Cronbach’s alpha assumption 4

A

-the items used to generate a composite score measure only 1 attribute or construct.

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6
Q

Standard coefficient alpha

A

You apply it to scores that have been converted from a raw score to a standardised score. E.g to z-scores.

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7
Q

Types of reliability assumption models

A

Parallel
Tau-Equivalent
Essentially Tau-Equivalent
Congeneric

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8
Q

Parallel

A
  • Equal true score variance
  • Equal means
  • Equal variance.
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9
Q

Tau-Equivalent

A
  • Equal true score variance
  • equal means
  • unequal error variances
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10
Q

Essentially Tau-Equivalent

A
  • Equal true score variance
  • Unequal means
  • Unequal error variances
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11
Q

Congeneric

A
  • Unequal true score variance (but all greater than zero)
  • Unequal means
  • Unequal error variances
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12
Q

Factors affecting reliability

A
  • Added items to a test must be parallel to other items to increase cronbach’s alpha.
  • but they really need only be essentially tau-equivalent items and possibly even congeneric in some cases.
  • main thing to consider is “will adding this item reduce the mean inter-item correlation”
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13
Q

Sample Homogeneity

A

-Homogenous samples will yield lower reliability estimates than a heterogeneous sample.

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14
Q

Standard error of measurement (SEM)

A

Amount of error “around” a point estimate (observed score) in standard deviation form.

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15
Q

Confidence interval

A
  • A confidence interval can be estimated around a point-estimate (observed score)
  • A confidence interval reflects a range of values that is often interpreted as a range in which the true score is likely to fall.
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16
Q

Standard error of estimate

A

Typically, people calculate the 95% confidence interval around a point estimate (observed score).

17
Q

2 types of correlations

A

Observed score correlation and true score correlation

18
Q

Observed Score Correlation

A
  • the correlation you get based on the data you have
  • will be compromised to the degree to which there is measurement error in your data.
  • In practice this means that the maximum correlation between two sets of scores is less than 1.0
19
Q

True Score Correlation

A
  • a hypothetical correlation you can estimate if you know the reliabilities associated with the scores.
  • Not compromised by measurement error.