Austrian Journal of Statistics (Apr 2016)
The Emergence of Item Response Theory Models and the Patient Reported Outcomes Measurement Information Systems
Abstract
Item response theory (IRT) models emerged to solve practical testing problems in large-scale cognitive achievement and aptitude assessment. Within the last decade, an explosion of IRT applications have occurred in the non-cognitive domain. In this report, I highlight the development, implementation, and results of a single project: Patient Reported Outcomes Measurement Information Systems (PROMIS). The PROMIS project reflects the state-of-the-art application of IRT in the non-cognitive domain, and has produced important advancements in patient reported outcomes measurement. However, the project also illustrates challenges that confront researchers wishing to apply IRT to non-cognitive constructs. These challenges are: a) selecting a population to set the metric for interpretation of item parameters, b) working with non-normal quasi-continuous latent traits, and c) working with narrow-bandwidth constructs that potentially have a limited pool of potential indicators. Differences between cognitive and non-cognitive measurement contexts are discussed and directions for future research suggested.