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Barth B. Riley, Ph.D., Michael L. Dennis, Ph.D., Kendon J. Conrad, Ph.D.

CAT Item Selection and Person Fit: Predictive Efficiency and Detection of Atypical Symptom Profiles. Barth B. Riley, Ph.D., Michael L. Dennis, Ph.D., Kendon J. Conrad, Ph.D. Funded by NIDA grant 1R21DA025731. Introduction. Do our measures accurately reflect a person’s performance or status?

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Barth B. Riley, Ph.D., Michael L. Dennis, Ph.D., Kendon J. Conrad, Ph.D.

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  1. CAT Item Selection and Person Fit: Predictive Efficiency and Detection of Atypical Symptom Profiles Barth B. Riley, Ph.D., Michael L. Dennis, Ph.D., Kendon J. Conrad, Ph.D. Funded by NIDA grant 1R21DA025731

  2. Introduction • Do our measures accurately reflect a person’s performance or status? • Example: Persons with few endorsed symptoms, but symptoms of high severity • Person fit statistics offer a means of detecting these patterns. • But, detecting person misfit in CAT is problematic: • Reduced number of items administered • Selected items cover limited range of measurement continuum

  3. Item Selection in CAT • Optimized for efficiency and precision of measurement estimation. • e.g., maximizing Fisher’s information function • Alternative procedures could be devised to balance efficiency/precision and obtaining responses over a wider range of the measurement continuum • e.g., Linacre’s (1995) Bayesian falsification procedure

  4. Purpose of Study • Examine the predictive efficiency and sensitivity of various person fit indices to detecting misfit in CAT • Predictive efficiency: how well can we predict the overall pattern of misfit based on item responses collected via CAT? • What effect does different item selection methods have on our ability to detect person misfit in a CAT context?

  5. Hypotheses • Predictive efficiency of CAT-derived person fit statistics will be enhanced by selecting items from a wider range of the measurement continuum. • Greater predictive efficiency will improve detection of atypical responding.

  6. Data Source and Simulation Procedure • Data were from 4,360 individuals presenting to substance abuse treatment upon intake • Post-hoc CAT simulations were performed: • One parameter IRT (Rasch) dichotomous response model. • Maximum-likelihood estimation • Item Selection Procedures • Modified “Bayesian” falsification procedure (MBF) • Maximum Fisher’s Information (MFI) • Stop Rule: all items were administered to examine the effects of successive item administration on person fit indices.

  7. Internal Mental Distress Scale • The IMDS is a 42-item instrument that is part of the Global Appraisal of Individual Needs (Dennis et al., 2003). • Measures: • Internal mental distress (second-order factor) • Depression • Anxiety • Trauma • Homicidality/Suicidality • Somatic complaints • Validated using a 1-parameter IRT (Rasch) measurement model

  8. Modified Bayesian Falsification Item Selection (MBF) • Set the start value for the measure (θ0) at 0 logits. • Calculate a “target” measure: • If previous item was endorsed or first item: θT = θi-1 + max(2,SE2) • Otherwise: θT = θi-1 – max(2,SE2) • For each unadministered item, compute the information function Ini(θT). • Select the item with the largest information function.

  9. Person Fit Statistics • Residual-based: • Infit, outfit (Wright & Stone, 1979; Wright, 1980) • Log infit and outfit (Wright & Stone, 1979) • Non-Parametric • Modified Caution Index (MCI; Harnisch & Linn, 1981) • HT (Sijtsma, 1986; Sijtsma & Meier, 1992) • Likelihood-Based • lz (Drasgow, Levine & Williams, 1985) • CAT-Specific (CUSUM; van Krimpen-Stoop & Meijer, 2000) • Used three different methods for estimating response residuals (T1, T3, and T6).

  10. Predictive Efficiency of Person Fit Statistics

  11. Predictive Efficiency, MFI Item Selection

  12. Predictive Efficiency, MBF Item Selection

  13. Min. Number of Items to Achieve R2= .80

  14. Identification of Persons with Atypical Suicide

  15. Atypical Suicide • Conrad and colleagues (2010) identified a subgroup with suicidal ideation with lower levels of depression, anxiety, trauma • In this study however, we defined atypical suicide as persons with: • 2+ suicidal symptoms • Level of internal mental distress is not predictive of suicidality. • Under typical CAT operation, these individuals would be unlikely to receive suicide items during a CAT session

  16. Suicide Groups Based on 2+ Symptoms N=7,348

  17. Predicting Atypical Suicide: All Items

  18. Sensitivity to Predict Atypical Suicide

  19. Comparison of Item Selection Procedures

  20. First 5 Items Administered by CAT

  21. CAT to Full Instrument Correlation

  22. Measurement Precision (RMSE)

  23. Test Information

  24. A Case Example

  25. MFI Item Selection and Measure Estimation First suicide item administered

  26. MBF Item Selection and Measure Estimation First suicide item administered

  27. Comparison

  28. Conclusions • Hypothesis 1: Item selection method had only a modest effect on predictive efficiency, though in the hypothesized direction. • MBF had strongest effect on outfit, lz and CUSUM (T6) • Partial support for Hypothesis 2: • MBF provided efficient detection of atypical suicide pattern • Reflects the type of items selected early in the CAT rather than on predictive efficiency • MBF was found to be somewhat less efficient than MFI

  29. Strengths and Limitations • Strengths • Large sample • Clinical sample • Several fit statistics examined • Limitations • Multidimensionality • Small item bank • Further work needed on defining “atypicalness” in clinical context • Further validation of approach across instruments, measurement models

  30. References • Conrad, K. J., Bezruczko, N., Chan, Y. F., Riley, B., Diamond, G., & Dennis, M. L. (2010). Screening for atypical suicide risk with person fit statistics among people presenting to alcohol and other drug treatment. Drug and Alcohol Dependence, 106(1), 92-100. • Drasgow, F., Levine, M. V., & McLaughlin, M. E. (1987). Detecting inappropriate test scores with optimal and practical appropriateness indices. Applied Psychological Measurement, 11(1), 59-79. • Harnisch, D. L., & Linn, R. L. (1981). Analysis of item response patterns: Questionable test data and dissimilar curriculum practices. Journal of Educational Measurement, 18(2), 133-146. • Linacre, J. M. (1995). Computer-adaptive testing CAT: A Bayesiian approach. Rasch Measurement Transactions, 9(1), 412. • Sijtsma, K. (1986). A coefficient of deviance of response patterns. Kwantitatieve Methoden, 7, 131–145. • Sijtsma, K., & Meijer, R. R. (1992). A method for investigating the intersection of item response functions in Mokken’s non-parametric IRT model. Applied Psychological Measurement, 16(2), 149-157. • van Krimpen-Stoop, E. M., & Meijer, R. R. (2000). Detecting person misfit in adaptive testing using statistical process control techniques. In W.J. van der Linden and C.A.W. Glas (Ed.), Computer adaptive testing: Theory and practice. Boston: Kluwer Academic. • Wright, B. D. (1980). Afterword. In G. Rasch (Ed.), Probabilistic models for some intelligence and attainment tests: With foreword and afterword by Benjamin D. Wright. Chicago: MESA Press. • Wright, B. D., & Stone, M. H. (1979). Best test design. Chicago: University of Chicago, MESA Press.

  31. Thank you! For more information, contact: Barth Riley, Ph.D. bbriley@chestnut.org For more information about the psychometrics of the Global Appraisal of Individual Needs (GAIN), including the Internal Mental Distress Scale, go to: http://www.chestnut.org/li/gain/#GAIN%20Working%20Papers

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