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Metodologia Przestrzeni Reguł×Diagnoza poznawcza w testowaniu adaptacyjnym×Model DINA×
DziedzinaPsychometriaPsychometriaPsychometria
RodzinaLatent structureLatent structureLatent structure
Rok powstania198320072001
TwórcaKikumi K. TatsuokaXueli Xu, Jean-Paul FoxBrian Junker, Klaas Sijtsma
TypIRT-based diagnostic classificationSkill-adaptive testing with psychometric diagnostic classificationDiscrete latent class model
Źródło pierwotneHartz, S. M. (2002). A Bayesian framework for the unified treatment of assessing dimensionality, assessing local dependence, and estimating ability for unidimensional and multidimensional item response data. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. link ↗Choi, K. M., Lee, Y. S., & Park, Y. S. (2015). What CDM can tell about examinees' strengths and weaknesses: Cognitive diagnostic information in TIMSS. Journal of Educational Evaluation for Policy Analysis, 24(1), 79-100. link ↗Junker, B. W., & Sijtsma, K. (2001). Cognitive assessment models with few assumptions, and connections with nonparametric item response theory. Applied Psychological Measurement, 25(3), 258-272. DOI ↗
Inne nazwyRSMCD-CATDINA
Pokrewne554
PodsumowanieRule Space Methodology (RSM) is a diagnostic classification approach developed by Tatsuoka (1983) that uses Item Response Theory and geometric methods to classify examinees into knowledge states based on their response patterns. Unlike classical scoring, RSM identifies which specific skills or competencies an examinee possesses or lacks, enabling targeted educational interventions.Cognitive Diagnostic Computerized Adaptive Testing (CD-CAT) combines computerized adaptive testing (CAT) with cognitive diagnostic models (CDMs) to efficiently assess students' specific skill profiles. Rather than producing a single overall ability score, CD-CAT adaptively selects items to quickly identify which skills a student has mastered and which need development.The DINA Model (Deterministic Inputs, Noisy Outputs) is a cognitive diagnostic model developed by Junker and Sijtsma (2001) that classifies examinees into latent skill classes based on their item response patterns. DINA assumes a deterministic relationship between skill mastery and correct responses, with probabilistic error accounting for guessing and slips.
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ScholarGatePorównaj metody: Rule Space Methodology · Cognitive Diagnostic Computerized Adaptive Testing · DINA Model. Pobrano 2026-06-20 z https://scholargate.app/pl/compare