Multicomponent Latent Trait Models for Ability Tests
- 1 December 1980
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Psychometrika
- Vol. 45 (4) , 479-494
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf02293610
Abstract
A major research direction for ability measurement has been to identify the information-processes that are involved in solving test items through mathematical modeling of item difficulty. However, this research has had limited impact on ability measurement, since person parameters are not included in the process models. The current paper presents some multicomponent latent trait models for reproducing test performance from both item and person parameters on processing components. Components are identified from item subtasks, in which performance is a logistic function (i.e., Rasch model) of person and item parameters, and then are combined according to a mathematical model of processing on the composite item.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Latent trait models in the study of intelligenceIntelligence, 1980
- The implications of processing event sequences for theories of analogical reasoningMemory & Cognition, 1979
- Cognitive correlates and components in the analysis of individual differencesIntelligence, 1979
- The nature of mental abilities.American Psychologist, 1979
- Testing based on understanding: Implications from studies of spatial abilityIntelligence, 1979
- Theory and method for research on aptitude processesIntelligence, 1978
- Information-Processing on Intelligence Test Items: Some Response ComponentsApplied Psychological Measurement, 1977
- Normal Ogive Model on the Continuous Response Level in the Multidimensional Latent SpacePsychometrika, 1974
- The linear logistic test model as an instrument in educational researchActa Psychologica, 1973
- Beyond Structure: In Search of Functional Models of Psychological ProcessPsychometrika, 1972