After the Wald statistics for each reduced CDM were calculated for each item, the
reduced models with p values less than the pre-specified alpha level were rejected.
If all reduced models were rejected for an item, the G-DINA model was used as the best model;
if at least one reduced model was retained, three diferent rules can be implemented for selecting
the best model:
When modelselectionrule
is simpler
:
If (a) the DINA or DINO model
was one of the retained models, then the DINA or DINO model with the larger p
value was selected as the best model; but if (b) both DINA and DINO were rejected, the reduced
model with the largest p value was selected as the best model for this item. Note that
when the p-values of several reduced models were greater than 0.05, the DINA and DINO models were
preferred over the A-CDM, LLM, and R-RUM because of their simplicity. This procedure is originally
proposed by Ma, Iaconangelo, and de la Torre (2016).
When modelselectionrule
is largestp
:
The reduced model with the largest p-values is selected as the most appropriate model.
When modelselectionrule
is DS
:
The reduced model with non-significant p-values but the smallest dissimilarity index is selected as the most appropriate model.
Dissimilarity index can be viewed as an effect size measure, which quatifies how dis-similar the reduced model is from the
G-DINA model (See Ma, Iaconangelo, and de la Torre, 2016 for details).