Week 6 - Utility
Week 6 - Utility
Utility Analysis
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Index of Utility
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Psychometric Soundness
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Cost
➢ Economic
HOW IS A UTILITY ANALYSIS CONDUCTED?
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➢ Noneconomic
Expectancy Data
Benefits
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Taylor-Russell Tables
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Test’s Validity
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concurrent validation
Selection Ratio procedures
Naylor-Shine Tables
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𝐒𝐚𝐯𝐢𝐧𝐠 = (n)(t)(r)(SDy )(m)
𝐂𝐨𝐬𝐭 𝐨𝐟 𝐭𝐞𝐬𝐭𝐢𝐧𝐠 = (# of applicants × cost per applicant)
Savings – Cost of Testing
E.g., Suppose we hire 10 auditors per year, the average person in
→ this position stays two years, the validity coefficient is .30, and the
average annual salary for the position is $30,000, and we have 50
applicants for 10 openings. Thus,
n = 10; t = 2; r = .30; SDy = $30,000 x .40 = $12,000
m = 10/50 = .20 = 1.40 (converted using standardized table)
➢ cost of testing = 50 applicants x $10
Base Rate
Hit Rate
Reference Point or Cut Score
Miss Rate
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→ False Positive
→ →
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Compensatory Model of Selection IRT-BASED METHODS
IRT-Based Methods
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Methods for Setting Cut Scores
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ANGOFF METHOD
Angoff Method
Item-Mapping Method
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Disadvantages.
Disadvantage.
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OTHER METHODS
Discriminant Analysis