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Latent structureRasch measurement / measurement interpretation

Wright Map Analysis

A Wright map (item-person map) is the signature graphical output of Rasch measurement: it places persons and items on the same vertical scale, with examinee abilities on one side and item difficulties on the other, both in logits. Because a person succeeds on an item with probability one-half when their ability equals the item's difficulty, this shared scaling lets analysts see at a glance how well a test is targeted to its examinees, what the items reveal about the construct's order, and where measurement is sparse. Named for Benjamin Wright and central to Mark Wilson's construct-mapping approach, it is a primary tool for interpreting and validating measures.

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Sources

  1. Wilson, M. (2005). Constructing Measures: An Item Response Modeling Approach. Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. ISBN: 9780805847857
  2. Bond, T. G., & Fox, C. M. (2015). Applying the Rasch Model: Fundamental Measurement in the Human Sciences (3rd ed.). Routledge. ISBN: 9780415833424

How to cite this page

ScholarGate. (2026, June 22). Wright Map Analysis of Person-Item Alignment in Rasch Measurement. ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/en/education/wright-map-analysis

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ScholarGateWright Map Analysis (Wright Map Analysis of Person-Item Alignment in Rasch Measurement). Retrieved 2026-06-24 from https://scholargate.app/en/education/wright-map-analysis · Dataset: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20539026