TitleStochastic Curtailment in Adaptive Mastery Testing: Improving the Efficiency of Confidence Interval–Based Stopping Rules
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2015
AuthorsSie, H, Finkelman, MD, Bartroff, J, Thompson, NA
JournalApplied Psychological Measurement
Volume39
Number4
Pagination278-292
AbstractA well-known stopping rule in adaptive mastery testing is to terminate the assessment once the examinee’s ability confidence interval lies entirely above or below the cut-off score. This article proposes new procedures that seek to improve such a variable-length stopping rule by coupling it with curtailment and stochastic curtailment. Under the new procedures, test termination can occur earlier if the probability is high enough that the current classification decision remains the same should the test continue. Computation of this probability utilizes normality of an asymptotically equivalent version of the maximum likelihood ability estimate. In two simulation sets, the new procedures showed a substantial reduction in average test length while maintaining similar classification accuracy to the original method.
URLhttp://apm.sagepub.com/content/39/4/278.abstract
DOI10.1177/0146621614561314