Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Development of Abbreviated Nine-Item Forms of the Raven’s Standard Progressive Matrices Test

2012; SAGE Publishing; Volume: 19; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1177/1073191112446655

ISSN

1552-3489

Autores

Warren B. Bilker, John A. Hansen, Colleen Brensinger, Jan Richard, Raquel E. Gur, Ruben C. Gur,

Tópico(s)

Cognitive Abilities and Testing

Resumo

The Raven's standard progressive matrices (RSPM) is a 60-item test for measuring abstract reasoning, considered a nonverbal estimate of fluid intelligence, and often included in clinical assessment batteries and research on patients with cognitive deficits. The goal was to develop and apply a predictive model approach to reduce the number of items necessary to yield a score equivalent to that derived from the full scale. The approach is based on a Poisson predictive model. A parsimonious subset of items that accurately predicts the total score was sought, as was a second nonoverlapping alternate form for repeated administrations. A split sample was used for model fitting and validation, with cross-validation to verify results. Using nine RSPM items as predictors, correlations of .9836 and .9782 were achieved for the reduced forms and .9063 and .8978 for the validation data. Thus, a 9-item subset of RSPM predicts the total score for the 60-item scale with good accuracy. A comparison of psychometric properties between 9-item forms, a published 30-item form, and the 60-item set is presented. The two 9-item forms provide a 75% administration time savings compared with the 30-item form, while achieving similar item- and test-level characteristics and equal correlations to 60-item based scores.

Referência(s)