On 27 Apr 2000 13:24:01 -0700, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Robert McGrath)
wrote:
> I am looking for a formula for kappa that applies for very special
> circumstances:
>
> 1) Two raters rated each event, but the raters varied across event.
> 2) The study involved 100 subjects, each of whom generated app.
I think I would consider using generalizability theory for this problem.
Shavelson and Webb have a good book out on the subject, published by Sage.
On Thu, 27 Apr 2000, Robert McGrath wrote:
> I am looking for a formula for kappa that applies for very special
> circumstances:
>
> 1) Two raters
I am looking for a formula for kappa that applies for very special
circumstances:
1) Two raters rated each event, but the raters varied across event.
2) The study involved 100 subjects, each of whom generated app. 17 events,
so multiple events were generated by the same subject.
I know Fleiss ha