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Quantifying idiosyncratic and shared contributions to judgment. | LitMetric

Quantifying idiosyncratic and shared contributions to judgment.

Behav Res Methods

Department of Psychology, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, USA.

Published: August 2020


Article Synopsis

  • The study addresses the challenge of understanding individual and shared influences on human behavior judgments, revealing that Variance Component Analyses (VCAs) can effectively identify these contributions through different types of stimuli.
  • Using simulations, findings highlighted that factors like sample size (at least 60 raters and 30 stimuli) influence the accuracy of the estimates, with repeated measures enhancing reliability.
  • The VCA approach, suitable for various judgment areas, allows for rigorous examination of data variance and can be applied in research involving multiple raters and stimuli.

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Article Abstract

Identifying relative idiosyncratic and shared contributions to judgments is a fundamental challenge to the study of human behavior, yet there is no established method for estimating these contributions. Using edge cases of stimuli varying in intrarater reliability and interrater agreement-faces (high on both), objects (high on the former, low on the latter), and complex patterns (low on both)-we showed that variance component analyses (VCAs) accurately captured the psychometric properties of the data (Study 1). Simulations showed that the VCA generalizes to any arbitrary continuous rating and that both sample and stimulus set size affect estimate precision (Study 2). Generally, a minimum of 60 raters and 30 stimuli provided reasonable estimates within our simulations. Furthermore, VCA estimates stabilized given more than two repeated measures, consistent with the finding that both intrarater reliability and interrater agreement increased nonlinearly with repeated measures (Study 3). The VCA provides a rigorous examination of where variance lies in data, can be implemented using mixed models with crossed random effects, and is general enough to be useful in any judgment domain in which agreement and disagreement are important to quantify and in which multiple raters independently rate multiple stimuli.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3758/s13428-019-01323-0DOI Listing

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