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      Use of Internal Consistency Coefficients for Estimating Reliability of Experimental Tasks Scores

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          Abstract

          Reliabilities of scores for experimental tasks are likely to differ from one study to another to the extent that the task stimuli change, the number of trials varies, the type of individuals taking the task changes, the administration conditions are altered, or the focal task variable differs. Given reliabilities vary as a function of the design of these tasks and the characteristics of the individuals taking them, making inferences about the reliability of scores in an ongoing study based on reliability estimates from prior studies is precarious. Thus, it would be advantageous to estimate reliability based on data from the ongoing study. We argue that internal consistency estimates of reliability are underutilized for experimental task data and in many applications could provide this information using a single administration of a task. We discuss different methods for computing internal consistency estimates with a generalized coefficient alpha and the conditions under which these estimates are accurate. We illustrate use of these coefficients using data for three different tasks.

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          Author and article information

          Contributors
          Journal
          9502924
          21568
          Psychon Bull Rev
          Psychon Bull Rev
          Psychonomic bulletin & review
          1069-9384
          1531-5320
          13 April 2017
          June 2016
          26 June 2017
          : 23
          : 3
          : 750-763
          Affiliations
          Arizona State University
          Florida State University
          University of Arizona
          Arizona State University
          Arizona State University
          MGH Institute of Health Professions
          University of Missouri
          Author notes
          Address: Samuel B. Green, Social Sciences Building, 951 S Cady Mall, P.O. Box 873701, Tempe, AZ 85287-3701, samgreen@ 123456asu.edu , Phone: (480) 727-6557
          Article
          PMC5484005 PMC5484005 5484005 nihpa736511
          10.3758/s13423-015-0968-3
          5484005
          26546100
          20878382-0999-4493-ad93-5b3ff7150688
          History
          Categories
          Article

          generalized coefficient alpha,reliability,coefficient alpha,split-half reliability

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