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| Teoria przestrzeni wiedzy× | Modele diagnozy poznawczej (DINA / G-DINA)× | Analiza Formalnych Konceptów (FCA)× | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dziedzina≠ | Analityka edukacyjna | Psychometria | Obliczenia miękkie |
| Rodzina≠ | Machine learning | Latent structure | Machine learning |
| Rok powstania≠ | 1985 | 2011 | 1982 |
| Twórca≠ | Jean-Paul Doignon & Jean-Claude Falmagne | Jimmy de la Torre | Rudolf Wille & Bernhard Ganter |
| Typ≠ | Combinatorial knowledge assessment framework | Latent variable diagnostic classification model | Lattice-based knowledge representation / concept mining |
| Źródło pierwotne≠ | Doignon, J.-P., & Falmagne, J.-C. (1985). Spaces for the assessment of knowledge. International Journal of Man-Machine Studies, 23(2), 175–196. DOI ↗ | de la Torre, J. (2011). The generalized DINA model framework. Psychometrika, 76(2), 179–199. DOI ↗ | Wille, R. (1982). Restructuring lattice theory: an approach based on hierarchies of concepts. In I. Rival (Ed.), Ordered Sets (pp. 445–470). Reidel. DOI ↗ |
| Inne nazwy | KST, Knowledge Structures, Competence-Based Knowledge Space Theory, Bilgi Uzayı Teorisi | Diagnostic Classification Model, Skills Assessment Model, Attribute Mastery Model, Bilişsel Tanı Modeli | FCA, concept lattice analysis, Galois lattice, biçimsel kavram analizi |
| Pokrewne≠ | 3 | 2 | 3 |
| Podsumowanie≠ | Knowledge Space Theory (KST) is a combinatorial, set-theoretic framework for modeling and assessing human knowledge, introduced by Jean-Paul Doignon and Jean-Claude Falmagne in 1985. It represents a learner's competence as a subset of a problem domain, organizes all feasible competence subsets into a lattice called a knowledge space, and uses probabilistic inference to locate a learner within that space. The approach underlies adaptive testing and intelligent tutoring systems, offering a mathematically rigorous alternative to classical test theory. | Cognitive Diagnosis Models (CDMs) are a family of latent variable models designed to classify examinees according to their mastery of a set of discrete cognitive attributes or skills. The Generalized DINA (G-DINA) framework, introduced by Jimmy de la Torre in 2011, provides a unifying structure that encompasses many specific CDMs — including the DINA, DINO, ACDM, and LLM models — as special cases, enabling fine-grained diagnostic feedback beyond a single total score. | Formal concept analysis derives a hierarchy of concepts from a simple table of which objects have which attributes. Founded by Rudolf Wille in 1982 on lattice theory, it pairs each set of objects with the attributes they all share to form 'formal concepts', then organizes these into a concept lattice — a mathematically grounded, interpretable hierarchy used for knowledge discovery, ontology building, and explainable analysis of categorical data. |
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