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<pubDate>Wed, 08 Sep 2010 23:52:34 GMT</pubDate>
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			<title>Development of a Flexilevel Scale for use with computer adaptive testing for assessing shoulder function</title>
			<description>&lt;span class=&quot;body_copy&quot;&gt;In a 5-year study, a self-report measure of shoulder function&amp;mdash;the Flexilevel Scale of Shoulder Function (FLEX-SF)&amp;mdash;was developed by use of item response the-ory. A large pool of candidate items (N  68) was developed. A questionnaire that included the 68 items, another scale of shoulder function, and clinical and demographic questions were administered to 400 per-sons with shoulder complaints. Patients&amp;rsquo; responses to the 68 items were calibrated by use of Andrich&amp;rsquo;s rat-ing scale model. Thirty-three items were selected from the pool and subdivided into three overlapping testlets targeting low, medium, and high shoulder function. A table translates raw scores on testlets to a common mathematical metric. The validity and reliability of the FLEX-SF was evaluated in a longitudinal study of 199 patients. The FLEX-SF scores were highly reliable and exhibited excellent validity (including responsiveness). We report on a simulation of a computer-adaptive test of shoulder function. This simulation is based on the developmental items we tested for use in the FLEX-SF. The results indicate that greater measurement effi-ciency can be achieved with a computer-adaptive test format. (J Shoulder Elbow Surg 2005;14:90S-94S.)&lt;/span&gt; 
&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;1-Feb-05 8:45 AM
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			<itunes:subtitle>Development of a Flexilevel Scale for use with computer adaptive testing for assessing shoulder function</itunes:subtitle>
			<itunes:summary>&lt;span class=&quot;body_copy&quot;&gt;In a 5-year study, a self-report measure of shoulder function&amp;mdash;the Flexilevel Scale of Shoulder Function (FLEX-SF)&amp;mdash;was developed by use of item response the-ory. A large pool of candidate items (N  68) was developed. A questionnaire that included the 68 items, another scale of shoulder function, and clinical and demographic questions were administered to 400 per-sons with shoulder complaints. Patients&amp;rsquo; responses to the 68 items were calibrated by use of Andrich&amp;rsquo;s rat-ing scale model. Thirty-three items were selected from the pool and subdivided into three overlapping testlets targeting low, medium, and high shoulder function. A table translates raw scores on testlets to a common mathematical metric. The validity and reliability of the FLEX-SF was evaluated in a longitudinal study of 199 patients. The FLEX-SF scores were highly reliable and exhibited excellent validity (including responsiveness). We report on a simulation of a computer-adaptive test of shoulder function. This simulation is based on the developmental items we tested for use in the FLEX-SF. The results indicate that greater measurement effi-ciency can be achieved with a computer-adaptive test format. (J Shoulder Elbow Surg 2005;14:90S-94S.)&lt;/span&gt;</itunes:summary>
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			<author>randy sarinas </author>
			<pubDate>Tue, 01 Feb 2005 14:45:00 GMT</pubDate>
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