Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11718/11205
Title: Cognitive Algebra of Exam Performance: tests of Hypotheses of Cultural Difference, Task Difficulty and Imputations
Authors: Singh, Ramadhar
Keywords: Cognitive Algebra;Cultural Diffrence;Hypotheses;Imputations;Motivation;Manipulation
Issue Date: 28-Sep-2012
Series/Report no.: WP;1984/517
Abstract: In a series of six month experiments, prediction of exam performance from information about motivation and ability as well as about motivation alone or ability Alone of students was studied. The factorial plot of the motivation x ability effect always yielded the parallelism pattern with subjects from both students and nonstudent populations. Manipulations of difficulty of exam did not alter this parallelism pattern. Results agreed with the hypotheses of cultural difference between India and America but disagreed with the hypotheses of task difficulty. Distinguishing tests between the adding and constant-weight averaging rules disclosed a developmental trend: high school and undergraduate students followed the adding rule. Establishment of these rules allowed analyses of imputations about missing information. The conventional distinguishing tests which rely on just one of the two heterogeneous types of information were found to be more useful in analyses of imputation rules than in diagnosis of cognitive algebra. Manipulation of information reliability disclosed presence of two initial opinions, one about motivation and other about ability, contrary to the finding of one initial opinion in American students.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11718/11205
Appears in Collections:Working Papers

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