Signal detection theory with item effects |
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Authors: | Lawrence T. DeCarlo |
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Affiliation: | Department of Human Development, Teachers College, Columbia University, 525 West 120th Street, Box 118, New York, NY 10027, United States |
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Abstract: | Applications of signal detection theory (SDT) often involve presentations of different items on each trial, such as slides in a medical imaging study or words in a memory study. If factors particular to the items themselves, apart from being a signal or noise, affect observers’ responses, then ‘item effects’ are present. One way to model these effects is to use a latent continuous variable as an item ‘factor’, such as item ‘difficulty’. Details of SDT models with item effects are clarified via derivations of their implied conditional means, variances, and covariances. Intra-item correlations are defined and suggested as measures of the magnitude of item effects. The SDT-item models are simple random coefficient models and can be fit with standard software. More general models, such as item models with mixing and/or with random observer effects, are also considered. |
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Keywords: | Item effects Random coefficient Mixture model Medical imaging Word recognition |
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