Abstract

Q-matrices are crucial components of cognitive diagnosis models (CDMs), which are used to provide diagnostic information and classify examinees according to their attribute profiles. The absence of an appropriate Q-matrix that correctly reflects item-attribute relationships often limits the widespread use of CDMs. Rather than relying on expert judgment for specification and post-hoc methods for validation, there has been a notable shift towards Q-matrix estimation by adopting Bayesian methods. Nevertheless, their dependency on Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) estimation requires substantial computational burdens and their exploratory tendency is unscalable to large-scale settings. As a scalable and efficient alternative, this study introduces the partially confirmatory framework within a saturated CDM, where the Q-matrix can be partially defined by experts and partially inferred from data. To address the dual needs of accuracy and efficiency, the proposed framework accommodates two estimation algorithms-an MCMC algorithm and a Variational Bayesian Expectation Maximization (VBEM) algorithm. This dual-channel approach extends the model's applicability across a variety of settings. Based on simulated and real data, the proposed framework demonstrated its robustness in Q-matrix inference.

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