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Interpreting results from Rasch analysis 1. The “most likely” measures coming from the model

Academic Article
Publication Date:
2023
Citation:
Interpreting results from Rasch analysis 1. The “most likely” measures coming from the model / L. Tesio, A. Caronni, D. Kumbhare, S. Scarano. - In: DISABILITY AND REHABILITATION. - ISSN 0963-8288. - (2023). [Epub ahead of print] [10.1080/09638288.2023.2169771]
abstract:
Purpose: The present article summarises the characteristics of Rasch's theory, providing an original metrological model for persons' measurements. Properties describing the person "as a whole" are key outcome variables in Medicine. This is particularly true in Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine, targeting the person's interaction with the outer world. Such variables include independence, pain, fatigue, balance, and the like. These variables can only be observed through behaviours of various complexity, deemed representative of a given "latent" person's property. So how to infer its "quantity"? Usually, behaviours (items) are scored ordinally, and their "raw" scores are summed across item lists (questionnaires). The limits and flaws of scores (i.e., multidimensionality, non-linearity) are well known, yet they still dominate the measurement in Medicine.Conclusions: Through Rasch's theory and statistical analysis, scores are transformed and tested for their capacity to respect fundamental measurement axioms. Rasch analysis returns the linear measure of the person's property ("ability") and the item's calibrations ("difficulty"), concealed by the raw scores. The difference between a person's ability and item difficulty determines the probability that a "pass" response is observed. The discrepancy between observed scores and the ideal measures (i.e., the residual) invites diagnostic reasoning. In a companion article, advanced applications of Rasch modelling are illustrated.
IRIS type:
01 - Articolo su periodico
Keywords:
Questionnaires; Rasch analysis; latent variables; measurement; metrology; physical and rehabilitation medicine; psychometrics
List of contributors:
L. Tesio, A. Caronni, D. Kumbhare, S. Scarano
Authors of the University:
CARONNI ANTONIO ( author )
Link to information sheet:
https://air.unimi.it/handle/2434/953792
Full Text:
https://air.unimi.it/retrieve/handle/2434/953792/2136840/Interpreting%20results%20from%20Rasch%20analysis%201.%20The%20%BFmost%20likely%BF%20measures%20coming%20from%20the%20model.pdf
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