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IRT ree models with ordinal and multidimensional decision nodes for response styles and trait‐based rating responses
Author(s) -
Meiser Thorsten,
Plieninger Hansjörg,
Henninger Mirka
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
british journal of mathematical and statistical psychology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.157
H-Index - 51
eISSN - 2044-8317
pISSN - 0007-1102
DOI - 10.1111/bmsp.12158
Subject(s) - judgement , trait , polytomous rasch model , ordinal data , item response theory , decision rule , computer science , psychology , econometrics , cognitive psychology , machine learning , artificial intelligence , mathematics , statistics , psychometrics , political science , law , programming language
IRT ree models decompose observed rating responses into sequences of theory‐based decision nodes, and they provide a flexible framework for analysing trait‐related judgements and response styles. However, most previous applications of IRT ree models have been limited to binary decision nodes that reflect qualitatively distinct and unidimensional judgement processes. The present research extends the family of IRT ree models for the analysis of response styles to ordinal judgement processes for polytomous decisions and to multidimensional parametrizations of decision nodes. The integration of ordinal judgement processes overcomes the limitation to binary nodes, and it allows researchers to test whether decisions reflect qualitatively distinct response processes or gradual steps on a joint latent continuum. The extension to multidimensional node models enables researchers to specify multiple judgement processes that simultaneously affect the decision between competing response options. Empirical applications highlight the roles of extreme and midpoint response style in rating judgements and show that judgement processes are moderated by different response formats. Model applications with multidimensional decision nodes reveal that decisions among rating categories are jointly informed by trait‐related processes and response styles.

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