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- Floor_effect abstract "In statistics, a floor effect (also known as a basement effect) arises when a data-gathering instrument has a lower limit to the data values it can reliably specify. This lower limit is known as the \"floor\".Floor effects are occasionally encountered in psychological testing, when a test designed to estimate some psychological trait has a minimum standard score that may not distinguish some test-takers who differ in their responses on the test item content. Giving preschool children an IQ test designed for adults would likely show many of the test-takers with scores near the lowest standard score for adult test-takers (IQ 40 on most tests that were currently normed as of 2010). To indicate differences in current intellectual functioning among young children, IQ tests specifically for young children are developed, on which many test-takers can score well above the floor score. An IQ test designed to help assess intellectually disabled persons might intentionally be designed with easier item content and a lower floor score to better distinguish among individuals taking the test as part of an assessment process.".
- Floor_effect wikiPageExternalLink 2000-07612-000.
- Floor_effect wikiPageExternalLink description.
- Floor_effect wikiPageExternalLink productCd-0470083581.html.
- Floor_effect wikiPageID "6436645".
- Floor_effect wikiPageLength "2623".
- Floor_effect wikiPageOutDegree "6".
- Floor_effect wikiPageRevisionID "705177073".
- Floor_effect wikiPageWikiLink Category:Statistical_terminology.
- Floor_effect wikiPageWikiLink Ceiling_effect_(statistics).
- Floor_effect wikiPageWikiLink Intellectual_disability.
- Floor_effect wikiPageWikiLink Intelligence_quotient.
- Floor_effect wikiPageWikiLink Psychological_testing.
- Floor_effect wikiPageWikiLink Statistics.
- Floor_effect wikiPageWikiLinkText "Floor effect".
- Floor_effect wikiPageWikiLinkText "floor effect".
- Floor_effect wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_book.
- Floor_effect subject Category:Statistical_terminology.
- Floor_effect comment "In statistics, a floor effect (also known as a basement effect) arises when a data-gathering instrument has a lower limit to the data values it can reliably specify. This lower limit is known as the \"floor\".Floor effects are occasionally encountered in psychological testing, when a test designed to estimate some psychological trait has a minimum standard score that may not distinguish some test-takers who differ in their responses on the test item content.".
- Floor_effect label "Floor effect".
- Floor_effect sameAs Q132169.
- Floor_effect sameAs Bodeneffekt_(Testverfahren).
- Floor_effect sameAs m.0g59gn.
- Floor_effect sameAs Q132169.
- Floor_effect wasDerivedFrom Floor_effect?oldid=705177073.
- Floor_effect isPrimaryTopicOf Floor_effect.