The Dirichlet Dual Response Model: An Item Response Model for Continuous Bounded Interval Responses release_rev_af93efda-4cd7-40f1-bed6-c45ec7e10cc8

by Matthias Kloft, Raphael Hartmann, andreas voss, Daniel W. Heck

Released as a post by Center for Open Science.

2022  

Abstract

Standard response formats such as rating or visual analogue scales require respondents to condense distributions of latent states or behaviors into a single value. Whereas this is suitable to measure central tendency, it neglects the variance of distributions. As a remedy, variability may be measured using interval-response formats, more specifically the dual-range slider (RS2). Given the lack of an appropriate item response model for the RS2, we develop the Dirichlet dual response model (DDRM), an extension of the beta response model (BRM; Noel & Dauvier, 2007). We evaluate the DDRM's performance by assessing parameter recovery in a simulation study. Results indicate overall good parameter recovery, although parameters concerning interval width (which reflect variability in behavior or states) perform worse than parameters concerning central tendency. We also test the model empirically by jointly fitting the BRM and the DDRM to single-range slider (RS1) and RS2 responses for two extraversion scales. While the DDRM has an acceptable fit, it shows some misfit regarding the RS2 interval widths. Nonetheless, the model indicates substantial differences between respondents concerning variability in behavior. High correlations between person parameters of the BRM and DDRM suggest convergent validity between the RS1 and the RS2 interval location. Both the simulation and the empirical study demonstrate that the latent parameter space of the DDRM addresses an important issue of the RS2 response format, namely, the scale-inherent interdependence of interval location and interval width (i.e., intervals at the boundaries are necessarily smaller).
In application/xml+jats format

Type  post
Stage   unknown
Date   2022-10-09
Work Entity
access all versions, variants, and formats of this works (eg, pre-prints)
Revision

This is a specific, static metadata record, not necessarily linked to any current entity in the catalog.

Catalog Record
Revision: af93efda-4cd7-40f1-bed6-c45ec7e10cc8
API URL: JSON