10.23641/asha.11368040.v1
William D. Hula
William D.
Hula
Gerasimos Fergadiotis
Gerasimos
Fergadiotis
Alexander M. Swiderski
Alexander M.
Swiderski
JoAnn P. Silkes
JoAnn P.
Silkes
Stacey Kellough
Stacey
Kellough
Computer-adaptive assessment of anomia (Hula et al., 2019)
ASHA journals
2019
computer
adaptive
alternate
short form
assessment
anomia
severity
language
item response theory
test
Philadelphia Naming Test
item bank
aphasia
PWA
treatment
clinical
Bayesian
postonset
equivalence
forms
differences
efficiency
sensitivity
change over time
intervention
accessing
retrieving
words
Language
2019-12-18 23:07:30
Figure
https://asha.figshare.com/articles/figure/Computer-adaptive_assessment_of_anomia_Hula_et_al_2019_/11368040
<div><b>Purpose:</b> The purpose of this study was to verify the equivalence of 2 alternate test forms with nonoverlapping content generated by an item response theory (IRT)–based computer-adaptive test (CAT). The Philadelphia Naming Test (PNT) (Roach, Schwartz, Martin, Grewal, & Brecher, 1996) was utilized as an item bank in a prospective, independent sample of persons with aphasia.</div><div><b>Method: </b>Two alternate CAT short forms of the PNT were administered to a sample of 25 persons with aphasia who were at least 6 months postonset and received no treatment for 2 weeks before or during the study. The 1st session included administration of a 30-item PNT-CAT, and the 2nd session, conducted approximately 2 weeks later, included a variable-length PNT-CAT that excluded items administered in the 1st session and terminated when the modeled precision of the ability estimate was equal to or greater than the value obtained in the 1st session. The ability estimates were analyzed in a Bayesian framework.</div><div><b>Results:</b> The 2 test versions correlated highly (r = .89) and obtained means and standard deviations that were not credibly different from one another. The correlation and error variance between the 2 test versions were well predicted by the IRT measurement model.</div><div><b>Discussion:</b> The results suggest that IRT-based CAT alternate forms may be productively used in the assessment of anomia. IRT methods offer advantages for the efficient and sensitive measurement of change over time. Future work should consider the potential impact of differential item functioning due to person factors and intervention-specific effects, as well as expanding the item bank to maximize the clinical utility of the test.</div><div><br></div><div><b>Supplemental Material S1.</b> Trace plots (left) and autocorrelation plots (right) for the estimated means and standard deviations for the PNT-CAT30 and PNT-CATVL.</div><div><br></div><div><b>Supplemental Material S2. </b>Trace plots (left) and autocorrelation plots (right) for the correlation coefficient and bias, variable error, and total error. </div><div><br></div><div>Hula, W. D., Fergadiotis, G., Swiderski, A. M., Silkes, J. P., & Kellough, S. (2019). Empirical evaluation of computer-adaptive alternate short forms for the assessment of anomia severity. <i>Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research.</i> Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1044/2019_JSLHR-L-19-0213</div>