Item Response Theory and Computerized Adaptive Testing: Implications for Outcomes Measurement in Rehabilitation. |
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Authors: | Ware, John E., Jr. Gandek, Barbara Sinclair, Samuel J. Bjorner, Jakob B. |
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Abstract: | Objective: To evaluate computerized adaptive testing (CAT) measures of rehabilitation outcomes. Study Design: Physical functioning questions were calibrated via item response theory (IRT) and administered with CAT software. Subjects: 485 adults interviewed during postacute care rehabilitation (simulation study) and 26 adults who completed CAT and personal interviews (CAT pilot study). Main Outcome Measures: Patient acceptance and respondent burden, reliability, and discriminant validity. Results: In the simulation study, CAT-based estimates correlated highly (r=.93 and r=.98) with criteria, minimized ceiling and floor effects, and reduced respondent burden while achieving high reliability. Pilot study patients preferred self-administered CAT surveys, and CAT scores discriminated well across severity levels. Conclusions: CAT software has considerable potential to improve physical functioning measurement in rehabilitation settings. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |
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Keywords: | item response theory computerized adaptive testing software rehabilitation outcomes measurement |
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