A nonparametric approach to cognitive diagnosis by proximity to ideal response patterns
From MaRDI portal
Publication:269220
DOI10.1007/s00357-013-9132-9zbMath1360.62521OpenAlexW2006389333MaRDI QIDQ269220
Publication date: 18 April 2016
Published in: Journal of Classification (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00357-013-9132-9
Related Items
Relationship validation among items and attributes ⋮ Joint maximum likelihood estimation for diagnostic classification models ⋮ A Gibbs sampling algorithm with monotonicity constraints for diagnostic classification models ⋮ A general method of empirical Q-matrix validation ⋮ Variational Bayes inference for hidden Markov diagnostic classification models ⋮ Bridging parametric and nonparametric methods in cognitive diagnosis ⋮ Three psychometric-model-based option-scored multiple choice item design principles that enhance instruction by improving quiz diagnostic classification of knowledge attributes ⋮ A procedure for assessing the completeness of the Q-matrices of cognitively diagnostic tests ⋮ Cognitive diagnosis for small educational programs: the general nonparametric classification method ⋮ Conditional independence and dimensionality of cognitive diagnostic models: a test for model fit ⋮ Variational Bayes inference algorithm for the saturated diagnostic classification model ⋮ How to build a complete Q-matrix for a cognitively diagnostic test ⋮ Advances in CD-CAT: the general nonparametric item selection method ⋮ Consistency theory for the general nonparametric classification method ⋮ Direct estimation of diagnostic classification model attribute mastery profiles via a collapsed Gibbs sampling algorithm ⋮ Consistency of nonparametric classification in cognitive diagnosis
Cites Work
- Defining a family of cognitive diagnosis models using log-linear models with latent variables
- Cluster analysis for cognitive diagnosis: theory and applications
- Bug distribution and statistical pattern classification
- Estimating multiple classification latent class models
- Higher-order latent trait models for cognitive diagnosis