mirt (version 1.33.2)

empirical_plot: Function to generate empirical unidimensional item and test plots

Description

Given a dataset containing item responses this function will construct empirical graphics using the observed responses to each item conditioned on the total score. When individual item plots are requested then the total score will be formed without the item of interest (i.e., the total score without that item).

Usage

empirical_plot(
  data,
  which.items = NULL,
  smooth = FALSE,
  formula = resp ~ s(TS, k = 5),
  main = NULL,
  par.strip.text = list(cex = 0.7),
  boxplot = FALSE,
  par.settings = list(strip.background = list(col = "#9ECAE1"), strip.border = list(col
    = "black")),
  auto.key = list(space = "right", points = FALSE, lines = TRUE),
  ...
)

Arguments

data

a data.frame or matrix of item responses (see mirt for typical input)

which.items

a numeric vector indicating which items to plot in a faceted image plot. If NULL then a empirical test plot will be constructed instead

smooth

logical; include a GAM smoother instead of the raw proportions? Default is FALSE

formula

formula used for the GAM smoother

main

the main title for the plot. If NULL an internal default will be used

par.strip.text

plotting argument passed to lattice

boxplot

logical; use a boxplot to display the marginal total score differences instead of scatter plots of proportions? Default is FALSE

par.settings

plotting argument passed to lattice

auto.key

plotting argument passed to lattice

...

additional arguments to be passed to lattice and coef()

Details

Note that these types of plots should only be used for unidimensional tests with monotonically increasing item response functions. If monotonicity should be true for all items, however, then these plots may serve as a visual diagnostic tool so long as the majority of items are indeed monotonic.

References

Chalmers, R., P. (2012). mirt: A Multidimensional Item Response Theory Package for the R Environment. Journal of Statistical Software, 48(6), 1-29. 10.18637/jss.v048.i06

See Also

itemplot, itemGAM

Examples

Run this code
# NOT RUN {
# }
# NOT RUN {
SAT12[SAT12 == 8] <- NA
data <- key2binary(SAT12,
   key = c(1,4,5,2,3,1,2,1,3,1,2,4,2,1,5,3,4,4,1,4,3,3,4,1,3,5,1,3,1,5,4,5))

#test plot
empirical_plot(data)

#items 1, 2 and 5
empirical_plot(data, c(1, 2, 5))
empirical_plot(data, c(1, 2, 5), smooth = TRUE)
empirical_plot(data, c(1, 2, 5), boxplot = TRUE)

# replace weird looking items with unscored versions for diagnostics
empirical_plot(data, 32)
data[,32] <- SAT12[,32]
empirical_plot(data, 32)
empirical_plot(data, 32, smooth = TRUE)

# }

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