Donoghue, John R.Cliff, Norman2011-09-022011-09-021991Donoghue, John R & Cliff, Norman. (1991). An investigation of ordinal true score test theory. Applied Psychological Measurement, 15, 335-351. doi:10.1177/014662169101500403doi:10.1177/014662169101500403https://hdl.handle.net/11299/114465The validity of the assumptions underlying Cliff’s (1989) ordinal true score theory (OTST) were investigated in a three-stage study. OTST makes only ordinal assumptions about the data, and provides a means of converting ordinal item information into summary ordinal information about examinees. Stage 1 was a simulation based on a classical (weak true score) test theory model. Stage 2 used a long empirical test to approximate the true order. Stage 3 was an extensive simulation based on the three-parameter logistic model. The results of all three studies were consistent; the assumption of local ordinal uncorrelatedness was violated in that partial item-item gamma (γ) correlations were positive instead of 0. The assumption of proportional distribution of ties was violated-pairs tied on one item were not distributed on the other as prescribed. The item-true order tau (τ) correlation was consistently overestimated, although the estimated τ correlated highly with the true τ. The τ correlation between total score and true order was also consistently overestimated. Stage 3 showed that these effects occurred under all conditions, although they were smaller under some conditions. Index terms: classical test theory, item response models, local independence, monte carlo simulation, nonparametric test models, ordinal regression, ordinal test models, test theory.enAn investigation of ordinal true score test theoryArticle