A Rasch analysis of the High Potential Trait Indicator: A South African sample

African Journal of Psychological Assessment

 
 
Field Value
 
Title A Rasch analysis of the High Potential Trait Indicator: A South African sample
 
Creator Semmelink, David S. Maree, David J.F.
 
Subject Psychology; Psychometrics psychometric properties; high potential trait indicator (HPTi); Rasch model fit; person reliability; differential item functioning
Description The reliability and validity of the six traits comprising the High Potential Trait Indicator (HPTi) were evaluated using Rasch analysis. Focus was designated to the unidimensionality and local independence of each subscale; fit to the Rasch model; person reliability and separation; and differential item functioning (DIF). Secondary data, obtained from intellectual property rights holder Thomas International, were used for analysis with a sample of 1257 South African respondents. One of the six traits, Curiosity (0.73), was found to be reliable. Traits Adjustment (0.69) and Competitiveness (0.69) border on the accepted cut-off of 0.70. Risk Approach (0.64) obtained the lowest reliability, closely followed by Conscientiousness (0.65) and Ambiguity Acceptance (0.65). Six of the 78 HPTi items did not fit the Rasch model, all of which underfit the model. Trait Curiosity was found not to be unidimensional, while the Ambiguity Acceptance scale approached the value at which a scale is considered multidimensional. One item was identified to be threatening the unidimensionality of the Curiosity scale based on both the factor loadings of the principal components analysis of the residuals and underfitting the Rasch model. The differential item functioning (DIF) analysis found no item bias between genders, female and male. Eleven items displayed DIF across ethnicities and home language groups. The most severe instance of DIF occurred in trait Competitiveness, yet it had only one item experiencing DIF. Trait Conscientiousness, however, contained four items experiencing various severities of DIF.Contribution: This study highlighted the shortcomings of the current HPTi in the South African context through Rasch analysis. The findings illustrate the difficult nature of creating ideal personality instruments in the South African context, thus contributing to the body of knowledge of personality assessments in South Africa.
 
Publisher AOSIS
 
Contributor Thomas International Ltd.
Date 2023-02-08
 
Type info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion — Rasch analysis
Format text/html application/epub+zip text/xml application/pdf
Identifier 10.4102/ajopa.v5i0.115
 
Source African Journal of Psychological Assessment; Vol 5 (2023); 11 pages 2617-2798 2707-1618
 
Language eng
 
Relation
The following web links (URLs) may trigger a file download or direct you to an alternative webpage to gain access to a publication file format of the published article:

https://ajopa.org/index.php/ajopa/article/view/115/373 https://ajopa.org/index.php/ajopa/article/view/115/374 https://ajopa.org/index.php/ajopa/article/view/115/375 https://ajopa.org/index.php/ajopa/article/view/115/376
 
Coverage — — South Africa
Rights Copyright (c) 2023 David S. Semmelink, David J.F. Maree https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
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