Multidimensional latent Markov models in a developmental study of inhibitory control and attentional flexibility in early childhood
DOI10.1007/s11336-010-9177-1zbMath1208.62179arXiv0901.0024OpenAlexW1996111109MaRDI QIDQ615675
Ivonne L. Solis-Trapala, Francesco Bartolucci
Publication date: 6 January 2011
Published in: Psychometrika (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/0901.0024
item response theoryRasch modelexecutive functiondimensionality assessmentlatent Markov modeltwo-parameter logistic parameterisation
Applications of Markov chains and discrete-time Markov processes on general state spaces (social mobility, learning theory, industrial processes, etc.) (60J20) Applications of statistics to psychology (62P15)
Related Items (1)
Uses Software
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Testing unidimensionality in polytomous Rasch models
- On the relationship between item response theory and factor analysis of discretized variables
- Two new test statistics for the Rasch model
- Estimating the dimension of a model
- Optimization of mixture models: Comparison of different strategies
- A class of multidimensional IRT models for testing unidimensionality and clustering items
- Constrained Statistical Inference
- Likelihood Inference for a Class of Latent Markov Models under Linear Hypotheses on the Transition Probabilities
- Asymptotic Properties of Maximum Likelihood Estimators and Likelihood Ratio Tests Under Nonstandard Conditions
- Towards a Unified Theory of Inequality Constrained Testing in Multivariate Analysis
- Hidden Markov Models for Speech Recognition
- Finite mixture models
- Finite Mixture Modeling with Mixture Outcomes Using the EM Algorithm
- Error bounds for convolutional codes and an asymptotically optimum decoding algorithm
- A Maximization Technique Occurring in the Statistical Analysis of Probabilistic Functions of Markov Chains
This page was built for publication: Multidimensional latent Markov models in a developmental study of inhibitory control and attentional flexibility in early childhood