Narayanan, PankajaSwaminathan, H.2011-10-212011-10-211994Narayanan, Pankaja & Swaminathan, H. (1994). Performance of the Mantel-Haenszel and simultaneous item bias procedures for detecting differential item functioning. Applied Psychological Measurement, 18, 315-328. doi:10.1177/014662169401800403doi:10.1177/014662169401800403https://hdl.handle.net/11299/117000Two nonparametric procedures for detecting differential item functioning (DIF)-the Mantel-Haenszel (MH) procedure and the simultaneous item bias (SIB) procedure-were compared with respect to their Type I error rates and power. Data were simulated to reflect conditions varying in sample size, ability distribution differences between the focal and reference groups, proportion of DIF items in the test, DIF effect sizes, and type of item. 1,296 conditions were studied. The SIB and MH procedures were equally powerful in detecting uniform DIF for equal ability distributions. The SIB procedure was more powerful than the MH procedure in detecting DIF for unequal ability distributions. Both procedures had sufficient power to detect DIF for a sample size of 300 in each group. Ability distribution did not have a significant effect on the SIB procedure but did affect the MH procedure. This is important because ability distribution differences between two groups often are found in practice. The Type I error rates for the MH statistic were well within the nominal limits, whereas they were slightly higher than expected for the SIB statistic. Comparisons between the detection rates of the two procedures were made with respect to the various factors. Index terms: differential item functioning, Mantel- Haenszel statistic, power, simultaneous item bias statistic, SIBTEST, Type I error rates.enPerformance of the Mantel-Haenszel and simultaneous item bias procedures for detecting differential item functioningArticle