Measurement in Health Behavior
Description
Tables, Figures, and Exhibits xv
Preface xxi
The Author xxv
1 Introduction to Measurement 1
Role of Measurement in Health Education and Health Behavior Research 1
Brief History of Psychosocial Measurement 3
Conceptualization of Measurement 6
Reasons for Measuring Concepts 8
Scales of Measurement 9
Nominal Scale 9
Ordinal Scale 11
Interval Scale 12
Ratio Scale 14
Levels of Measurement and Statistics 15
Major Concepts of Measurement: Reliability and Validity 16
Reliability 16
Validity 17
Summary 17
2 Types of Measures 18
Self-Report 19
Interviews 19
Questionnaires 20
Journals and Diaries 22
Response Scales 23
Scaling Methods 24
Visual Analog Scale 24
Thurstone Scale 26
Likert Scale 28
Guttman Scale 29
Semantic Differential Rating Scale 30
Indexes 31
Observations 33
Biobehavioral Measures 33
Electronic Measures 34
Summary 35
3 Measurement Error 36
Definition 37
Classification of Measurement Error 38
Random Error 38
Systematic Error 39
Measurement Error Factors 40
Respondent Factors 40
Response Sets 42
Social Desirability 42
Acquiescence and Nay-Saying 44
End Aversion (Central Tendency) 44
Positive Skew 45
Halo 46
Recall 46
Instrument Factors 48
Strategies to Reduce Errors on Self-Report Questionnaires 50
Strategies to Reduce Errors During Interviews 51
Situational Factors 51
Measurement Rules 53
Summary 53
4 Survey Development 54
Definition 55
Basic Principles of Survey Construction 55
Purpose 55
Objectives 56
Respondents 59
General Principles of Item Writing 59
The Do’s of Item Writing 60
The Don’ts of Item Writing 68
Survey Format 70
Survey Administration 72
Summary 74
5 Knowledge Tests 75
Test Construction 76
State the Purpose of the Test 76
State the Test Objectives 78
Review Content 79
Develop a Table of Test Specifications 79
Domain-Sampling Model 80
Types of Items 84
Multiple-Choice Items 85
True/False Items 90
Item Analysis 92
Item-Objective Congruency 92
Average Congruency Percentage 98
Difficulty Index 98
Item Discrimination Index 101
Summary 101
6 Theory and Measurement 103
Linking Measurement to Theory-Based Health Practice and Research 104
Gibbs’s Model 106
Theoretical and Operational Definitions 109
Conceptualization Issues in Scale Development 110
Survey Versus Scale 110
Single-Item Versus Multiple-Item Scales 111
Concept Selection 113
Concept Analysis 114
Identify Definitions and Uses of the Concept 114
Identify Critical Attributes of the Concept 116
Identify Dimensions of the Concept 117
Identify Similar and Different Concepts 117
Identify Antecedents and Consequences of the Concept 118
Write a Model Case 118
State the Variables 119
Summary 119
7 Item Writing and Scaling 121
Item Development Process 122
State the Theoretical Definition 123
Identify Dimensions of the Concept 123
Create a Content-Domain by Concept-Dimension Matrix 123
Decide How Many Items to Include for Each Matrix Cell 124
Write Items for Each Content-Domain by Concept-Dimension Cell 126
Literature Review 126
Qualitative Interviews 126
Other Instruments 127
Write Rules for Scale Scoring and Administration 128
Summated Rating Scales 128
Types of Response Options 128
Number of Response Options 130
Odd or Even Number of Categories 131
Meanings of Response Option Adjectives or Adverbs 132
Use of Adjectives, Adverbs, or Numbers, or Combinations Thereof 132
Positively and Negatively Worded Items 133
Scoring 133
Summary 135
8 Review of Statistical Concepts 136
Basic Statistical Concepts 137
Frequency Distribution 137
Measures of Central Tendency 139
Measures of Dispersion 139
SPSS Commands 140
Recode Negatively Worded Items Using SPSS 144
Compute Total Scale Scores Using SPSS 145
Review of Correlation 146
Interpretation of the Correlation Coefficient 150
Correlation Matrix 152
Correlation Issues 152
Causality 152
Sample Size 153
Group Differences 154
Restriction of Range 154
Variance 154
Reporting Results of Correlation Analysis 156
Analysis of Variance 157
Definition and Use 157
SPSS Commands for a One-Way ANOVA 158
Interpreting a One-Way ANOVA 158
Summary 162
9 Fundamentals of Reliability 163
Classical Test Theory 165
Observed, True, and Error Scores 165
Assumptions and Characteristics 167
Reliability Coefficient 170
Estimate of Reliability 172
Calculation of Variance Due to the True Score 173
Calculation of the Reliability Index 174
Summary 174
10 Reliability Assessment and Item Analysis 176
Methods of Reliability Assessment 177
Equivalence 177
Stability 178
Internal Consistency 181
Split-Half 181
Coefficient Alpha 184
Cronbach’s Alpha 186
Kuder-Richardson Formula 20 189
Factors Associated with Coefficient Alpha 191
Test Length and Interitem Correlation 191
Test Adjustments to Increase Alpha 191
Standards of Reliability 193
Item Analysis 193
Intrarater and Interrater Reliability 199
Intraclass Correlation Coefficient 203
Standard Error of Measurement 205
Generalizability Theory 206
Summary 210
11 Validity 211
Test Content 214
Procedures 215
Content Validity Index 218
Face Validity 219
Response Processes 220
Procedures 221
Think Aloud 221
Verbal Probe 222
Evaluation 222
Relationships to Other Variables 224
Criterion Validity 225
Construct Validity 229
Multitrait-Multimethod Matrix 233
Validity Issues 235
Summary 236
12 Factor Analysis 237
Exploratory Factor Analysis 238
Definition 238
Conceptual Basis 241
How Factor Analysis Works 244
Steps in Factor Analysis 244
Basic Requirements for FA 246
Initial Assessment 247
Evaluation of the Matrix 248
Evaluation of the Determinant 250
Test for an Identity Matrix 251
Tests of Sampling Adequacy 252
Selection of the Type of Factor Analysis 253
Initial Extraction 255
Eigenvalues 256
Communality 257
Number of Factors 261
Rotation of Factors 263
Interpretation of Factors 267
Confirmatory Factor Analysis 273
Summary 275
13 Item Response Theory 276
Disadvantages of Classical Test Theory 277
Item Response Theory Basics 278
Polytomous Models 285
Technical Issues 288
Summary 289
References 290
Index 297
Colleen Konicki Di Iorio, Ph.D., R.N., F.A.A.N, is a professor in the department of behavioral sciences and health education at Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, and the associate editor of The Journal of Nursing Measurement. She has published numerous journal articles and book chapters on research and measurement methods in public health. Di Iorio is a contributor to the third edition of Health Education and Health Behavior from Jossey-Bass. Measurement in Health BehaviorMeasurement in Health Behavior is a practical, step-by-step introduction to the wide variety of measurement methods in the field of health behavior research. The text addresses the practical issues related to the development of measures of health behavior and provides information on how to conduct the reliability and validity tests.
Measurement in Health Behavior offers faculty, students, researchers, and public health professionals the information they need to improve their knowledge of instrument development and testing and their understanding of reliability and validity testing discussed in articles and reports. The book also helps improve students' and professionals' ability to conduct basic tests for reliability and validity and hones their skills in interpreting the results of data analysis. Based on data collected from the author's more than ten years of research and program development, Measurement in Health Behavior provides realistic examples from the public health arena to clearly demonstrate the book's concepts.
A comprehensive resource, Measurement in Health Behavior
- Presents a brief description of the different types of measures that are used to collect data about health behavior or associated factors
- Includes strategies for reducing measurement errors
- Offers information about survey development and knowledge test construction
- Covers information about scale development and includes important information related to the analysis of concepts
- Presents basic statistical concepts and puts the focus on reliability
- Offers a presentation of classical test theory and includes the different types of reliability assessment
- Includes several strategies for assessing validity and presents the basic principles of factor analysis
- Contains an elementary description of item response theory
PUBLISHER:
Wiley
ISBN-13:
9780787970970
BINDING:
Paperback
BISAC:
Medical
BOOK DIMENSIONS:
Dimensions: 177.80(W) x Dimensions: 233.70(H) x Dimensions: 25.40(D)
AUDIENCE TYPE:
General/Adult
LANGUAGE:
English