A critical examination of the analysis of dichotomous data

Philosophy of Science 44 (1):113-135 (1977)
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Abstract

This paper takes a critical look at theory-free, statistical methodologies for processing and interpreting data taken from respondents answering a set of dichotomous (yes-no) questions. The basic issue concerns to what extent theoretical conclusions based on such analyses are invariant under a class of "informationally equivalent" question transformations. First the notion of Boolean equivalence of two question sets is discussed. Then Lazarsfeld's latent structure analysis is considered in detail. It is discovered that the best fitting latent model depends on which one of the many informationally equivalent question sets is used. This fact raises a number of methodological problems and pitfalls with latent structure analysis. Related problems with other methodologies are briefly discussed

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Citations of this work

Notational Variants and Invariance in Linguistics.Kent Johnson - 2015 - Mind and Language 30 (2):162-186.
Verisimilitude redeflated.David Miller - 1976 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 27 (4):363-381.
Logic, literacy, and professor Gellner.Paul Feyerabend - 1976 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 27 (4):381-391.

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