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Ordinale Generalisierbarkeitstheorie×Ordinale Item-Response-Theorie×
FachgebietPsychometriePsychometrie
FamilieLatent structureLatent structure
Entstehungsjahr1963–20011969
UrheberLee J. Cronbach and Robert L. BrennanFumiko Samejima (Graded Response Model, 1969); Gerhard Fischer & Georg Rasch lineage for partial credit
TypReliability / generalizability analysisProbabilistic latent trait model for ordered polytomous responses
Wegweisende QuelleBrennan, R. L. (2001). Generalizability Theory. Springer. ISBN: 978-0387952826Samejima, F. (1969). Estimation of latent ability using a response pattern of graded scores. Psychometrika Monograph Supplement, 34(4, Pt. 2), 1–97. link ↗
AliasnamenOrdinal G-theory, G-theory for ordinal data, ordinal variance component analysis, G-study for ordered categorical datapolytomous IRT, ordinal IRT models, graded response models, ordinal latent trait models
Verwandt56
ZusammenfassungOrdinal generalizability theory extends classical G-theory to the analysis of reliability and measurement error when item responses are ordered categorical (e.g., Likert-type) rather than continuous. It partitions score variance into components attributable to persons, facets, and their interactions, while accounting for the discrete, bounded nature of ordinal rating scales.Ordinal item response theory (ordinal IRT) comprises a family of probabilistic models — most notably the Graded Response Model and the Partial Credit Model — that relate a respondent's standing on a latent trait to the probability of choosing each ordered response category on a polytomous item. It extends classical IRT beyond dichotomous items to the Likert-type and rating-scale items that dominate psychometric measurement.
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ScholarGateMethoden vergleichen: Ordinal Generalizability Theory · Ordinal IRT. Abgerufen am 2026-06-19 von https://scholargate.app/de/compare