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Differential Item Functioning by Sex and Race in the Hogan Personality Inventory

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Differential Item Functioning by Sex and Race in the Hogan Personality Inventory

Abstract

The authors examined measurement bias in the Hogan Personality Inventory by investigating differential item functioning (DIF) across sex and two racial groups (Caucasian and Black). The sample consisted of 1,579 Caucasians (1,023 men, 556 women) and 523 Blacks (321 men, 202 women) who were applying for entry-level, unskilled jobs in factories. Although the group mean differences were trivial, more than a third of the items showed DIF by sex (38.4%) and by race (37.3%). A content analysis of potentially biased items indicated that the themes of items displaying DIF were slightly more cohesive for sex than for race. The authors discuss possible explanations for differing clustering tendencies of items displaying DIF and some practical and theoretical implications of DIF in the development and interpretation of personality inventories.
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Title
Differential Item Functioning by Sex and Race in the Hogan Personality Inventory
Author(s)
Sheppard,Richard; Han,Kyunghee; Colarelli,Stephen M.; Dai,Guangdong; King,Daniel W.
Journal
Assessment , Volume 13 (4): 442 SAGE – Dec 1, 2006
Publisher
Sage Publications
Copyright
Copyright © 2006 by SAGE Publications
ISSN
1073-1911
eISSN
1073-1911
D.O.I.
10.1177/1073191106289031
Publisher site
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