Test Reliability and Correction for Attenuation
- 1 June 1950
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Psychometrika
- Vol. 15 (2) , 115-119
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf02289196
Abstract
Evidence is cited to show that specificity, or lack of equivalence, in the comparable forms of tests has a tendency to lower the value of reliability coefficients but has no tendency to lower the value of observed trait coefficients. This implies that the greater the lack of equivalence, the higher will be coefficients corrected for attenuation. Errors of measurement are supposed to reduce the magnitude of observed trait coefficients. Since specificity does not lower the correlation between two tests and since the split-half and equivalent-form reliability coefficients treat specificity as error, it follows that these two coefficients cannot legitimately be used in Spearman's correction-for-attenuation formula.Keywords
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