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Applying the Rasch Model: Fundamental Measurement in the Human Sciences

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TLDR
This volume contends that Rasch measurement is the model of choice because it is the closest to realizing the sort of objective fundamental measurement so long revered in the physical sciences.
Abstract
For many researchers, the Rasch model provides a very practical solution to data analysis in the social sciences. This volume contends that Rasch measurement is the model of choice because it is the closest to realizing the sort of objective fundamental measurement so long revered in the physical sciences. Trevor Bond has worked with leading Rasch theoreticians for more than 15 years, advising developmentalists and teachers on how to conduct and interpret Rasch analyses of their own data. After each of his many research presentations, Dr. Bond was asked to recommend a suitable text for those who wish to learn more about Rasch analysis. Unfortunately, the books published to date require a significant knowledge of statistics and not easily accessible to many practicing researchers. This lack of a suitable introductory text is the driving force behind this book. The goals of this authored volume are: * to present an accessible overview of the basic properties and principles of Rasch analysis, that does not require a sophisticated statistical background, * to demonstrate how Rasch analysis can be applied to a number of generic problems encountered by psychologists and educators, and * to prepare readers for performing their own analyses and interpreting the results. This book is ideal for all researchers in the human sciences interested in learning how to actually implement the Rasch model with their own data.

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Understanding the Acceptance of Nature-Preservation-Related Restrictions as the Result of the Compensatory Effects of Environmental Attitude and Behavioral Costs:

TL;DR: Personal costs that accompany nature-preservation-related restrictions hurt their acceptance, irrespective of whether individuals care about environmental protection or not (i.e., irrespective of p... as mentioned in this paper ). But the costs of nature preservation are not universal.
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A study of the correlation between patient-reported outcomes and clinical outcomes after cataract surgery in ophthalmic clinics

TL;DR: To analyse the relationship between patient‐reported outcome measures and clinical outcome measures in 42 individual Swedish cataract surgery settings, a large number of patients reported positive outcomes in both the outpatient and post-operative phases.
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Dimensionality of the UWES-17: An item response modelling analysis

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used the Rasch model to provide insight into the dimensionality of the Utrecht Work Engagement Scale (UWES-17), and to assess whether work engagement should be interpreted as one single overall score, three separate scores, or a combination.
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Item fit statistics for Rasch analysis: can we trust them?

TL;DR: This work compares fit statistics for the Rasch model based on estimates of unconditional or conditional response probabilities and recommends conditional residuals should be used and parametric bootstrapping is recommended to calculate valid p -values.
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Item Response Theory Modeling of the Philadelphia Naming Test.

TL;DR: Regression of item difficulty on lexical variables supported the validity of the PNT and interpretation of anomia severity scores in the context of current word-finding models.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The distribution of piagetian stages of thinking in british middle and secondary school children

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors measured the proportion of children showing early and late concrete operational thinking and formal operational thinking in a sample of 10,000 children between the ages of 9 and 14.
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A Rasch Analysis of a Measure of Computer Anxiety

TL;DR: In this article, the dimensionality of the computer-anxiety index (CAIN) by Rasch analysis of the responses of 372 eleven-to twelve-year-old elementary school students was tested.