TU-L0022 - Statistical Research Methods D, Lecture, 2.11.2021-6.4.2022
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Unidimensionality (4:32)
This video goes through unidimensionality. The video explains what unidimensionality means and why it is important.
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One of the assumptions of classical test theory - and
all the reliability indices based on that theory - is that the indicators of a
scalar unidimensional measures of one construct. So what does unidimensionality mean? Unidimensional
basically means that we can meaningfully summarize the construct with a single
number. So if you have multiple dimensions in the construct we need multiple
numbers. The idea is that each indicator - like in a classical
test theory - they measure the same thing. The same thing is T and the
indicators all capture T plus some random noise and this is the statistical
model for unidimensional measurement. This is also known as the factor analysis
model. So why is unidimensionality important? Why can't you
just summarize distinct things into into a single score? The reason can be
understood with an example. So let's take a look at this example. We have a
score defined as person's height plus person's weight and we take a sum. We
call it the person's size. So the problem is which one is bigger? The tall and
skinny person or the short and fat person? We cannot really say because the
concept of a big person relates to both of those concepts. You can say that a person is big if they're tall or
they're big if they are just heavy. And let's also say my size is about 250
using this score. So what does it really tell about me? I could be a tall and a skinny person. If we want to
study whether I'm a good athlete or not, being tall and skinny or being short
and fat, they probably have different performance consequences. If I'm tall and
skinny I could be a good long distance runner. If I'm short and fat I could be
a good in sports that require strength, for example. So there are, these are two different kinds of people.
We cannot say that these are equivalent. The idea of unidimensionality and unidimensional scale
is that we can summarize all relevant information about the construct being
studied with one number. With person's size we need two numbers. We need at
least two numbers: height and weight. We can also have shoe size and whatever
but the height and weight are the two most important ones. Why is this important? It is because if we try to
theorize the causes or consequences of person's size score, the causes and
consequences of being heavy and being tall are different. So for example if I would go to a try-out in a
basketball team the coach would say that I'm too small for basketball. My size
is 250, then the average size of a person in the team is 300. So I'm too small. So how do I make myself larger? I could eat more in
which case my size will become a bigger. I would be a fat person and I still
would make it in a team because the others would be tall and skinny in the team
or anyway tall. The same thing we can influence only one of those. So
if you're saying that you have a cause of person's size then at least for the
adult population the only way you can influence your size is by changing your
weight by eating more and exercising less. So these concepts of height and weight are distinct
dimensions of the higher level concept of person's size. It doesn't make any
sense to take a sum of those. This is relevant for business research because you
oftentimes see construct such as entrepreneurial orientation which is defined
as three main dimensions of innovativeness, proactiveness and risk-taking. You
have product mix called marketing mix consisting of product, price, place and
promotion and then you measure each of those dimensions separately. Sometimes researchers still generate one score that is
supposed to summarize those dimensions. That makes as much sense as summarizing
person's size as the sum of height and weight.