Modeling motive activation in the Operant Motives Test: A psychometric analysis using Dynamic Thurstonian Item Response Theory

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Modeling motive activation in the Operant Motives Test : A psychometric analysis using Dynamic Thurstonian Item Response Theory. / Runge, J. Malte; Lang, Jonas W. B.; Engeser, Stefan; Schüler, Julia; den Hartog, Sophie C.; Zettler, Ingo.

In: Motivation Science, Vol. 2, No. 4, 2016, p. 268-286.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Runge, JM, Lang, JWB, Engeser, S, Schüler, J, den Hartog, SC & Zettler, I 2016, 'Modeling motive activation in the Operant Motives Test: A psychometric analysis using Dynamic Thurstonian Item Response Theory', Motivation Science, vol. 2, no. 4, pp. 268-286. https://doi.org/10.1037/mot0000041

APA

Runge, J. M., Lang, J. W. B., Engeser, S., Schüler, J., den Hartog, S. C., & Zettler, I. (2016). Modeling motive activation in the Operant Motives Test: A psychometric analysis using Dynamic Thurstonian Item Response Theory. Motivation Science, 2(4), 268-286. https://doi.org/10.1037/mot0000041

Vancouver

Runge JM, Lang JWB, Engeser S, Schüler J, den Hartog SC, Zettler I. Modeling motive activation in the Operant Motives Test: A psychometric analysis using Dynamic Thurstonian Item Response Theory. Motivation Science. 2016;2(4):268-286. https://doi.org/10.1037/mot0000041

Author

Runge, J. Malte ; Lang, Jonas W. B. ; Engeser, Stefan ; Schüler, Julia ; den Hartog, Sophie C. ; Zettler, Ingo. / Modeling motive activation in the Operant Motives Test : A psychometric analysis using Dynamic Thurstonian Item Response Theory. In: Motivation Science. 2016 ; Vol. 2, No. 4. pp. 268-286.

Bibtex

@article{29fa6f8bae6646a28dc4c8beee65fdf0,
title = "Modeling motive activation in the Operant Motives Test: A psychometric analysis using Dynamic Thurstonian Item Response Theory",
abstract = "The Operant Motive Test (OMT) is a picture-based procedure that asks respondents to generate imaginative verbal behavior that is later coded for the presence of affiliation, power, and achievement-related motive content by trained coders. The OMT uses a larger number of pictures and asks respondents to provide more brief answers than earlier and more traditional picture-based implicit motive measures and has therefore become a frequently used measurement instrument in both research and practice. This article focuses on the psychometric response mechanism in the OMT and builds on recent advancements in the psychometric modeling of the response process in implicit motive measures through the use of Thurstonian item-response theory. The contribution of the article is twofold. First, the article builds on a recently developed dynamic Thurstonian model for more traditional implicit motive measures (Lang, 2014) and reports the first analysis of which we are aware that applies this model to OMT data (N = 633) and studies dynamic motive activation in the OMT. Results of this analysis yielded evidence for dynamic motive activation in the OMT and showed that simulated IRT reliabilities based on the dynamic model were .52, .62, and .73 for the affiliation, achievement, and power motive in the OMT, respectively. The second contribution of this article is a tutorial and R code that allows researchers to directly apply the dynamic Thurstonian IRT model to their data. The future use of the OMT in research and potential ways to improve the OMT are discussed.",
keywords = "Faculty of Social Sciences, Operant Motive Test, implicit motives, Thurstonian choice model, psychometric theory, item response theory",
author = "Runge, {J. Malte} and Lang, {Jonas W. B.} and Stefan Engeser and Julia Sch{\"u}ler and {den Hartog}, {Sophie C.} and Ingo Zettler",
year = "2016",
doi = "10.1037/mot0000041",
language = "English",
volume = "2",
pages = "268--286",
journal = "Motivation Science",
issn = "2333-8113",
publisher = "American Psychological Association",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Modeling motive activation in the Operant Motives Test

T2 - A psychometric analysis using Dynamic Thurstonian Item Response Theory

AU - Runge, J. Malte

AU - Lang, Jonas W. B.

AU - Engeser, Stefan

AU - Schüler, Julia

AU - den Hartog, Sophie C.

AU - Zettler, Ingo

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - The Operant Motive Test (OMT) is a picture-based procedure that asks respondents to generate imaginative verbal behavior that is later coded for the presence of affiliation, power, and achievement-related motive content by trained coders. The OMT uses a larger number of pictures and asks respondents to provide more brief answers than earlier and more traditional picture-based implicit motive measures and has therefore become a frequently used measurement instrument in both research and practice. This article focuses on the psychometric response mechanism in the OMT and builds on recent advancements in the psychometric modeling of the response process in implicit motive measures through the use of Thurstonian item-response theory. The contribution of the article is twofold. First, the article builds on a recently developed dynamic Thurstonian model for more traditional implicit motive measures (Lang, 2014) and reports the first analysis of which we are aware that applies this model to OMT data (N = 633) and studies dynamic motive activation in the OMT. Results of this analysis yielded evidence for dynamic motive activation in the OMT and showed that simulated IRT reliabilities based on the dynamic model were .52, .62, and .73 for the affiliation, achievement, and power motive in the OMT, respectively. The second contribution of this article is a tutorial and R code that allows researchers to directly apply the dynamic Thurstonian IRT model to their data. The future use of the OMT in research and potential ways to improve the OMT are discussed.

AB - The Operant Motive Test (OMT) is a picture-based procedure that asks respondents to generate imaginative verbal behavior that is later coded for the presence of affiliation, power, and achievement-related motive content by trained coders. The OMT uses a larger number of pictures and asks respondents to provide more brief answers than earlier and more traditional picture-based implicit motive measures and has therefore become a frequently used measurement instrument in both research and practice. This article focuses on the psychometric response mechanism in the OMT and builds on recent advancements in the psychometric modeling of the response process in implicit motive measures through the use of Thurstonian item-response theory. The contribution of the article is twofold. First, the article builds on a recently developed dynamic Thurstonian model for more traditional implicit motive measures (Lang, 2014) and reports the first analysis of which we are aware that applies this model to OMT data (N = 633) and studies dynamic motive activation in the OMT. Results of this analysis yielded evidence for dynamic motive activation in the OMT and showed that simulated IRT reliabilities based on the dynamic model were .52, .62, and .73 for the affiliation, achievement, and power motive in the OMT, respectively. The second contribution of this article is a tutorial and R code that allows researchers to directly apply the dynamic Thurstonian IRT model to their data. The future use of the OMT in research and potential ways to improve the OMT are discussed.

KW - Faculty of Social Sciences

KW - Operant Motive Test

KW - implicit motives

KW - Thurstonian choice model

KW - psychometric theory

KW - item response theory

U2 - 10.1037/mot0000041

DO - 10.1037/mot0000041

M3 - Journal article

VL - 2

SP - 268

EP - 286

JO - Motivation Science

JF - Motivation Science

SN - 2333-8113

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 169915159