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RESEARCH PRODUCT
I-states-as-objects-analysis (ISOA): Extensions of an approach to studying short-term developmental processes by analyzing typical patterns
Alexander Von EyeJari-erik NurmiLars R. Bergmansubject
Social Psychologybusiness.industryStability (learning theory)Pattern recognitionDegree (music)Structural equation modelingEducationTerm (time)Developmental NeuroscienceSample size determinationStatisticsDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyArtificial intelligenceTime pointLife-span and Life-course StudiesbusinessSet (psychology)Social Sciences (miscellaneous)ta515Variable (mathematics)Mathematicsdescription
I-states-as-objects-analysis (ISOA) is a person-oriented methodology for studying short-term developmental stability and change in patterns of variable values. ISOA is based on longitudinal data with the same set of variables measured at all measurement occasions. A key concept is the i-state, defined as a person’s pattern of variable values at a specific time point. All i-states are first subjected to a classification analysis that results in a time-invariant classification characterized by a number of typical i-states. Each person is then characterized at each time point by the typical i-state he/she belongs to. Then the person’s sequences of typical i-states are analyzed with regard to structural and individual stability and change. Extensions of ISOA are presented where: (1) some methods for checking the assumption of a time-invariant classification are indicated; (2) information about the degree of dissimilarity between typical i-states is used as an aid in interpreting the findings; and (3) attention is given to closed paths—that is, typical i-state sequences that do not occur at all. To demonstrate the methods, an empirical example is given that concerns the development of children’s achievement-intelligence patterns between ages 10 and 13.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2012-05-01 | International Journal of Behavioral Development |