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  2. Acceptability judgment task - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acceptability_judgment_task

    An acceptability judgment task, also called acceptability rating task, is a common method in empirical linguistics to gather information about the internal grammar of speakers of a language. Acceptability and grammaticality

  3. Rating scale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rating_scale

    A rating scale is a set of categories designed to obtain information about a quantitative or a qualitative attribute. In the social sciences , particularly psychology , common examples are the Likert response scale and 0-10 rating scales, where a person selects the number that reflecting the perceived quality of a product .

  4. Consensus-based assessment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consensus-based_assessment

    Peter Legree and Joseph Psotka, working together over the past decades, proposed that psychometric g could be measured unobtrusively through survey-like scales requiring judgments. This could either use the deviation score for each person from the group or expert mean; or a Pearson correlation between their judgments and the group mean. The two ...

  5. Mental status examination - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mental_status_examination

    The mental status examination (MSE) is an important part of the clinical assessment process in neurological and psychiatric practice. It is a structured way of observing and describing a patient's psychological functioning at a given point in time, under the domains of appearance, attitude, behavior, mood and affect, speech, thought process, thought content, perception, cognition, insight, and ...

  6. Holistic grading - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holistic_grading

    Pooled-rater scoring typically uses three to five independent readers for each sample of writing. Although the scorers work from a common scale of rates, and may have a set of sample papers illustrating that scale ("anchor papers" [20]), usually they have had a minimum of training together. Their scores are simply summed or averaged for the ...

  7. Analytic confidence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Analytic_confidence

    Analytic confidence is a rating employed by intelligence analysts to convey doubt to decision makers about a statement of estimative probability. The need for analytic confidence ratings arise from analysts' imperfect knowledge of a conceptual model. An analytic confidence rating pairs with a statement using a word of estimative probability to ...

  8. Social judgment theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_judgment_theory

    Social judgment theory is a framework that studies human judgment. It is how people's current attitudes shape the development of sharing and communicating information. [ 1 ] The psychophysical principle involved for example, is when a stimulus is farther away from one's judgmental anchor, a contrast effect is highly possible; when the stimulus ...

  9. Rate making - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rate_making

    Judgment Rating is used when the factors that determine potential losses are varied and cannot easily be quantified. [2] There are no statistics regarding quantity of future losses and probability. This means an underwriter rates each exposure individually. The second rate making method is class rating, or manual rating.