Interplay between speed and accuracy: Novel empirical insights based on 1/4 billion item responses
user-5f1696ff4c775ed682f5929f(2020)
摘要
As our ability to collect data about respondents increases, approaches for incorporating ancillary data features such as response time are of heightened interest. Models for response time have been advanced, but relatively limited large-scale empirical investigations have been conducted. We take advantage of a unique and massive dataset—data from computer adaptive administrations of the NWEA MAP Growth assessment in two states consisting of roughly 1/4 billion item responses—containing both item responses plus response times to shed light on emergent features of response time behavior. We focus on two behaviors in particular. The first, response acceleration, is a reduction in response time for responses that occur relatively late on the assessment. We further note that such reductions are heterogeneous as a function of estimated ability (lower ability estimates are associated with larger increases in acceleration) and that reductions in response time on later items lead to reductions in accuracy relative to expectation. We also document variation in interplay between speed and accuracy. In some cases, additional time spent on an item is associated with an increase in accuracy; in other cases, the opposite is true. This finding has potential connections to the nascent literature on different within-person response processes. We argue that our approach may be useful in other settings and that the behaviors observed here should be of interest in other data.
更多查看译文
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络