Reliability for survey questionnaire with nominal response options

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Reliability for survey questionnaire with nominal response options

E. Bernardo


Dear all,
 
The items of a survey instrument are designed with four nominal response options.  It was administered to the same sample (n=32) in two occasions (Test-re-test). What coefficient shall I use in order to test for the reliability of each item and the instrument as a whole?

Thanks.
Eins


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Re: Reliability for survey questionnaire with nominal response options

statisticsdoc
Eins,
There are many parts to the questions you ask. One part deals with the test-retest reliability of a specific nominal item. Cohen's Kappa provides an index of how well the responses obtained at different times agree with one another. A sample of 32 is a little small to estimate the test retest reliability of an item.
The question of assessing the reliability of the instrument as a whole raises broader questions - how is the broader instrument used? Do you compute multi-item composites?
Best,
Stephen Brand
www.StatisticsDoc.com

From: Eins Bernardo <[hidden email]>
Sender: "SPSSX(r) Discussion" <[hidden email]>
Date: Thu, 8 Dec 2011 09:34:58 +0800
ReplyTo: Eins Bernardo <[hidden email]>
Subject: Reliability for survey questionnaire with nominal response options



Dear all,
 
The items of a survey instrument are designed with four nominal response options.  It was administered to the same sample (n=32) in two occasions (Test-re-test). What coefficient shall I use in order to test for the reliability of each item and the instrument as a whole?

Thanks.
Eins


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Re: Reliability for survey questionnaire with nominal response options

Rich Ulrich
In reply to this post by E. Bernardo
As Stephen points out, 32 is a small N for reliability.

I will further point out that having a survey instrument of all-nominal
items is unusual; and that kappa is not a very informative measure
when there are more than 2 categories unless it simply confirms
that the number of discrepancies is remarkably small.

 - For a much larger N, I have used a kappa for each of the 2x2 tables
that are be derived for each variable -- taking each category as Yes/No
for the four responses, in your example.  If I'm really interested in the
reliability, I'm concerned about each of the categories.  I wrote a
program that used to table that up for me, but it doesn't run on my
64-bit PC.  It showed me both the kappa (for similarity) and the McNemar
chi-squared (for *systematic*  change)  for each category.  This is
parallel to my favorite way of documenting paired continuous items,
which uses the correlation r  and the paired t-test.

What you have as raw data are your "discrepancies."  Are there many?
Count them.  Report them.  If there were 8 responses in a category at
Pre, a change by "one" is more than 10%, and already worth noting.
A change by "two" must show a pretty labile measurement.  Reporting
the counts will be much more informative than using a derived statistic.

--
Rich Ulrich


Date: Thu, 8 Dec 2011 09:34:58 +0800
From: [hidden email]
Subject: Reliability for survey questionnaire with nominal response options
To: [hidden email]



Dear all,
 
The items of a survey instrument are designed with four nominal response options.  It was administered to the same sample (n=32) in two occasions (Test-re-test). What coefficient shall I use in order to test for the reliability of each item and the instrument as a whole?