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Cronbach's alpha

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Cronbach's math (alpha) has an important use as a measure of the reliability of a psychometric instrument. It indicates the extent to which a set of test items can be treated as measuring a single latent variable. It was first named as alpha by Cronbach (1951), although an earlier version is the Kuder-Richardson Formula 20 (often shortened to KR-20), which is the equivalent for dichotomous items, and Guttman (1945) developed the same quantity under the name lambda-2.

Given that a sample was measured on a set of k items, Cronbach's math is defined as the mean correlation across the items, adjusted upward by the Spearman-Brown prediction formula by k. It is related to the outcome of an analysis of variance of the item data into variance due to the individuals in the sample and variance due to the items. The higher the proportion of variance due to individuals, the higher Cronbach's math.

math can take values between minus infinity and 1 (although only positive values make sense). As a rule of thumb, a proposed psychometric instrument should only be used if an math value of 0.70 or higher is obtained on a substantial sample. However the standard of reliability required varies between fields of psychology: cognitive tests (tests of intelligence or achievement) tend to be more reliable than tests of attitudes or personality. There is also variation within fields: it is easier to construct a reliable test of a specific attitude than of a general one, for example.

Alpha is most appropriately used when the items measure different substantive areas within a single construct (conversely, alpha can be artificially inflated by making superficial changes to the wording within a set of items). Although this description of the use of math is given in terms of psychology, the statistic can be used in any discipline.

[edit] Formula

Below the formula for the standardized Cronbach's math:

math

Here N is equal to the number of items and math is the average inter-item correlation among the items.

[edit] References

  • Cronbach, L. J. (1951). Coefficient alpha and the internal structure of tests. Psychometrika, 16, 297-333.

[edit] See also

Smallwikipedialogo.png This page uses content from the English-language version of Wikipedia. The original article was at Cronbach's alpha. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with Psychology Wiki, the text of Wikipedia is available under the GNU Free Documentation License.

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