TY - JOUR
T1 - Analyzing multiple-item measures of crime and deviance I
T2 - Item response theory scaling
AU - Osgood, D. Wayne
AU - McMorris, Barbara J.
AU - Potenza, Maria T.
N1 - Funding Information:
Part of this research was conducted with the support of a Gallup Research Professorship for the first author, through the Gallup Survey Research Center of the University of Nebraska—Lincoln. The first author thanks Frank Dunford, Del Elliott, and Marty Gold for getting him started on these problems many years ago, and Travis Hirschi for encouragement along the way.
PY - 2002
Y1 - 2002
N2 - Multiple-item measures of self-reported offending typically provide the principal outcome measures for individual level research on the causes of crime and deviance. This article directs attention to the substantial problems presented by the task of forming composite scores for these measures, and it presents a possible solution to those problems. We consider scaling by means of the graded response model from item response theory (IRT) as a potential means of overcoming the shortcomings of traditional summative scaling and of obtaining valuable information about the strengths and weaknesses of our measures. We illustrate this strategy through a scale analysis of a fourteen-item, self-report measure of delinquency, using three years of data from the Monitoring the Future study, an annual national survey of high school seniors. The graded response model proves to be consistent with the data, and it provides results that address important substantive questions about self-report measures. The findings are informative about the strengths and weaknesses of alternative strategies for developing self-report instruments, indicating that there is little to be gained by making fine distinctions in the frequency of individual delinquent acts.
AB - Multiple-item measures of self-reported offending typically provide the principal outcome measures for individual level research on the causes of crime and deviance. This article directs attention to the substantial problems presented by the task of forming composite scores for these measures, and it presents a possible solution to those problems. We consider scaling by means of the graded response model from item response theory (IRT) as a potential means of overcoming the shortcomings of traditional summative scaling and of obtaining valuable information about the strengths and weaknesses of our measures. We illustrate this strategy through a scale analysis of a fourteen-item, self-report measure of delinquency, using three years of data from the Monitoring the Future study, an annual national survey of high school seniors. The graded response model proves to be consistent with the data, and it provides results that address important substantive questions about self-report measures. The findings are informative about the strengths and weaknesses of alternative strategies for developing self-report instruments, indicating that there is little to be gained by making fine distinctions in the frequency of individual delinquent acts.
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U2 - 10.1023/A:1016008004010
DO - 10.1023/A:1016008004010
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0036290308
SN - 0748-4518
VL - 18
SP - 267
EP - 296
JO - Journal of Quantitative Criminology
JF - Journal of Quantitative Criminology
IS - 3
ER -