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  2. Guttman scale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guttman_scale

    Guttman scale has been generalized to the theory and procedures of "multiple scaling" which identifies the minimum number of scales needed for satisfactory reproducibility. As a procedure that ties substantive contents with logical aspects of data, Guttman scale heralded the advent of facet theory developed by Louis Guttman and his associates.

  3. Bogardus social distance scale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bogardus_Social_Distance_Scale

    The Bogardus social distance scale is a cumulative scale (a Guttman scale), because agreement with any item implies agreement with all preceding items. Research by Bogardus first in 1925 and then repeated in 1946, 1956, and 1966 shows that the extent of social distancing in the US is decreasing slightly and fewer distinctions are being made ...

  4. Scale (social sciences) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scale_(social_sciences)

    The Guttman scale is related to Rasch measurement; specifically, Rasch models bring the Guttman approach within a probabilistic framework. Constant sum scale – a respondent is given a constant sum of money, script, credits, or points and asked to allocate these to various items (example : If one had 100 Yen to spend on food products, how much ...

  5. Attitude (psychology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attitude_(psychology)

    The Guttman scale focuses on items that vary in their degree of psychological difficulty. Supplementing these are several techniques that do not depend on deliberate responses such as unobtrusive, standard physiological, and neuroscientific measures. [ 18 ]

  6. Facet theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Facet_Theory

    The well known Guttman scale [25] [24] (example: 1111, 1121, 1131, 2131, 2231, 2232) is simply a 1-d scalogram, i.e. one all of whose profiles are comparable. The procedure of identifying and interpreting the coordinate scales X 1 ...

  7. Thurstone scale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thurstone_scale

    The scale is then obtained as a left-adjusted column marginal average of this standard score matrix (Thurstone, 1927b). The underlying rationale for the method and basis for the measurement of the "psychological scale separation between any two stimuli" derives from Thurstone's Law of comparative judgment (Thurstone, 1928).

  8. Likert scale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Likert_scale

    Discan scaleScale and method in clinical psychology; K-factor – Standardized psychometric measure of psychopathology and personality; Guttman scale – Single, ordinal psychometric scale, allowing original observations to be reproduced. Ipsative; Mokken scale; Phrase completion scales – Psychometric scale used in questionnaires

  9. Mokken scale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mokken_scale

    In essence, a Mokken scale is a non-parametric, probabilistic version of Guttman scale. Both Guttman and Mokken scaling can be used to assess whether a number of items measure the same underlying concept. Both Guttman and Mokken scaling are based on the assumption that the items are hierarchically ordered: this means that they are ordered by ...