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| 코헨의 카파 계수× | 플레이스 카파 (Fleiss' Kappa)× | 맥니마르 검정× | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 분야 | 통계학 | 통계학 | 통계학 |
| 계열 | Hypothesis test | Hypothesis test | Hypothesis test |
| 기원 연도≠ | 1960 | 1971 | 1947 |
| 창시자≠ | Jacob Cohen | Joseph L. Fleiss | Quinn McNemar |
| 유형≠ | Inter-rater reliability coefficient | Non-parametric agreement measure | Nonparametric test for paired binary data |
| 원전≠ | Cohen, J. (1960). A Coefficient of Agreement for Nominal Scales. Educational and Psychological Measurement, 20(1), 37–46. DOI ↗ | Fleiss, J.L. (1971). Measuring Nominal Scale Agreement Among Many Raters. Psychological Bulletin, 76(5), 378–382. DOI ↗ | McNemar, Q. (1947). Note on the sampling error of the difference between correlated proportions or percentages. Psychometrika, 12(2), 153–157. DOI ↗ |
| 별칭≠ | kappa coefficient, kappa statistic, Cohen's Kappa (Değerlendiriciler Arası Uyum) | multi-rater kappa, Fleiss kappa, Fleiss' Kappa (Çoklu Değerlendirici Uyumu) | McNemar chi-square test, test for correlated proportions, paired binary test, McNemar Testi |
| 관련≠ | 3 | 2 | 5 |
| 요약≠ | Cohen's kappa (κ) is a statistical measure of inter-rater reliability for categorical classifications, introduced by Jacob Cohen in 1960. Unlike simple percent agreement, kappa corrects for the level of agreement that would be expected purely by chance, making it the standard metric when two raters independently assign observations to the same set of mutually exclusive categories. | Fleiss' Kappa is a non-parametric statistic for measuring the degree of agreement among three or more raters who classify items into mutually exclusive nominal categories. Introduced by Joseph L. Fleiss in 1971 as a generalization of Cohen's Kappa beyond two raters, it corrects observed agreement for the level of agreement expected by chance alone, making it the standard reliability index in medical diagnosis studies, content analysis, and multi-coder research. | McNemar's test is a nonparametric hypothesis test that compares two paired (correlated) binary proportions, such as a yes/no measurement taken on the same subjects before and after an intervention. It was introduced by Quinn McNemar in 1947 and works on the 2×2 table of matched outcomes. |
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