Intraclass correlation and Cronbach's alpha are widely used to describe reliability of tests and measurements. Even with Gaussian data, exact distributions are known only for compound symmetric covariance (equal variances and equal correlations). Recently, large sample Gaussian approximations were derived for the distribution functions.New exact results allow calculating the exact distribution function and other properties of intraclass correlation and Cronbach's alpha, for Gaussian data with any covariance pattern, not just compound symmetry. Probabilities are computed in terms of the distribution function of a weighted sum of independent chi-square random variables.NewF approximations for the distribution functions of intraclass correlation and Cronbach's alpha are much simpler and faster to compute than the exact forms. Assuming the covariance matrix is known, the approximations typically provide sufficient accuracy, even with as few as ten observations.Either the exact or approximate distributions may be used to create confidence intervals around an estimate of reliability. Monte Carlo simulations led to a number of conclusions. Correctly assuming that the covariance matrix is compound symmetric leads to accurate confidence intervals, as was expected from previously known results. However, assuming and estimating a general covariance matrix produces somewhat optimistically narrow confidence intervals with 10 observations. Increasing sample size to 100 gives essentially unbiased coverage. Incorrectly assuming compound symmetry leads to pessimistically large confidence intervals, with pessimism increasing with sample size. In contrast, incorrectly assuming general covariance introduces only a modest optimistic bias in small samples. Hence the new methods seem preferable for creating confidence intervals, except when compound symmetry definitely holds.
[1]
Peter Lancaster,et al.
The theory of matrices
,
1969
.
[2]
L. Cronbach,et al.
Time-limit tests: Estimating their reliability and degree of speeding
,
1951,
Psychometrika.
[3]
L. Cronbach.
Coefficient alpha and the internal structure of tests
,
1951
.
[4]
R. Davies.
The distribution of a linear combination of 2 random variables
,
1980
.
[5]
William J. Wilson,et al.
Multivariate Statistical Methods
,
2005,
Technometrics.
[6]
A. M. Mathai.
Quadratic forms in random variables
,
1992
.
[7]
H. Neudecker,et al.
On the distribution of the maximum likelihood estimator of Cronbach's alpha
,
2000
.
[8]
N. L. Johnson,et al.
Continuous Univariate Distributions.
,
1995
.
[9]
Walter Kristof.
The statistical theory of stepped-up reliability coefficients when a test has been divided into several equivalent parts
,
1963
.
[10]
ON THE TRACE OF A WISHART.
,
2018,
Communications in statistics: theory and methods.
[11]
L. S. Feldt.
The approximate sampling distribution of Kuder-Richardson reliability coefficient twenty
,
1965,
Psychometrika.
[12]
Arjun K. Gupta.
The Theory of Linear Models and Multivariate Analysis
,
1981
.