XI Conference – European Congress of Methodology

Atlantic/Canary
EAM2025

EAM2025

Av. César Manrique, 38320 La Laguna, Santa Cruz de Tenerife
África Borges del Rosal (Universidad de La Laguna)
Description

The European Congress of Methodology is organized biennially by the European Association of Methodology (EAM), a society established in 2004, which currently brings together a large number of researchers from all over the world to exchange ideas on developing new methods and on applying new methodologies in empirical research.

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    • Session 10 : "Statistical Applications in Social Sciences and Sports" Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/11 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

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      • 1
        Measuring Distance to University in Germany: How Accurate is the Straight-Line Approach?
      • 2
        Analysis of long-term and feedback effects in individual physical activity patterns
      • 3
        Labour market participation and Unpaid Care Work in the UK: An Intersectional Multilevel Analysis of Individual Heterogeneity and Discriminatory Accuracy (MAIHDA)
      • 4
        Improving Scale Properties With a Bifactor Structure: Measuring Work as a Calling
      • 5
        Q-Matrix Validation with Factor Retention Methods in Cognitive Diagnosis Modeling
      • 6
        Longitudinal Trajectories of Presenteeism and Absenteeism: The Role of Trait Competitiveness in Early Career Researchers
    • Session 2 : "Innovative methods in Measurement and Evaluation" Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/12 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/12 - Room

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      • 7
        Investigating the potential of large language models to streamline psychometric test development
      • 8
        Towards the adaptation of the learning patterns model in Primary Education: an explanatory study
      • 9
        Using pictographic single-item measures to overcome psychometric challenges: A pre-registered development and validation of the Meditation Pictographic Scale (MPS)
      • 10
        Play-Along Interviews: A Child-Centered Method for Research with Children
      • 11
        Assessment of Problematic Social Networking Sites Use Among Youth and Adolescents
      • 12
        Setting Stopping Rules for Progressive Tests: A Practical and Transparent Toolkit
    • Session 6 : "Structural models and complex data analysis" Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/13 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

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      • 13
        Standard Error Estimation in the Local Structural-After-Measurement (LSAM) Approach
      • 14
        The Structural-after-Measurement (SAM) approach: updates and extensions.
      • 15
        A simulation study comparing structural-after-measurement versus traditional approaches to estimate nonlinear effects in structural equation modeling
      • 16
        Extending Log-Logistic IRT: A Multidimensional Model and Its Implementation in R
      • 17
        Exploring the Consensus Emergence Model as a Tool for Analyzing Intra-Individual Variability in Psychological Development
      • 18
        Alignment optimization and the sequential testing approach for data harmonization
    • Symposium : "Advancing many groups comparisons: Mixture multigroup approach for latent variable analysis" Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/10 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

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      • 19
        Mixture Multigroup Structural Equation Modeling: An empirical application revealing cross-national patterns in how human values predict climate policy support
      • 20
        Extending Mixture Multigroup Structural Equation Modeling to deal with ordinal variables
      • 21
        Evaluating the Efficacy of Mixture Multigroup Factor Analysis in Handling Non-Normal and Ordinal Data: A Simulation Study
      • 22
        MixMG-SEM with double mixture modeling to capture similarities in measurement model and in structural relations across many groups
      • 23
        Evaluating (Mixture) Multigroup Structural Equation Modelling with Exploratory Measurement Models
      • 24
        Mixture Three-Step Latent Vector Autoregression to Find Individuals With Similar Dynamic Processes
    • Symposium : "Mixed methodologies" Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/9 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

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      • 25
        Analysis of the relationship between self-esteem level and interest, importance and learning achievements in highly able students through mixed method design
      • 26
        Influence of Intelligence and Gender on Mathematics Anxiety: Verbalized Strategies to Overcome Difficulties
      • 27
        MMR Approach in the Study of Physical Activity, Intelligence, and Gender in Adolescents
      • 28
        Motives for Lying in Mexican Adolescents
      • 29
        Multipotentiality in university students and its relationship with gender, high abilities and entrance score
      • 30
        Subjective perception of Fear of Public Speaking. A mixed-methods research
    • Session 11: "Education, Accesibility and Methodological Critique"
      • 31
        Towards a universal design in Psychometrics: Designing an accessible course for students with visual impairments in an online environment
      • 32
        Methodological Critique in Science: A Geometric and Algebraic Approach to Evaluating Research Quality
      • 33
        A Comparison of Crossed-Random Investigations of Educational Leadership in Psychology and Economics
      • 34
        Instruments for measuring Mathematical Anxiety in the last 10 years: what we know and what we can do.
      • 35
        Methods of music research and its role in the contemporary context
      • 36
        Effects of Technology-Enhanced Mathematics Learning: A Raw IPD Multilevel Meta-Analysis of Single-Case Experiments
    • Session 12 : "Validity and Reliability in Psychological measurement" Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/13 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

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      • 37
        Person- or situation-specific? Factors explaining convergent validity and discrepancy between self-report and digital trace of smartphone use
      • 38
        Evaluating the concurrent validity of traditional and alternative measures used in university admission processes in Spain
      • 39
        Reliability and validity of experimental measures of value-driven attention: a meta-analysis on individual differences studies
      • 40
        Multiple Imputation of missing values for randomized controlled trials: A step-by-step tutorial using mice
      • 41
        Prior sensitivity analysis in Bayesian SEM and its application in R
      • 42
        Protocol for Developing Validation Studies (PROVAL): A Comprehensive Framework and Illustrative Application
    • Session 8 : "Psychometric evaluation in forced-choice tests" Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/12 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

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      • 43
        Empirical Evaluation of Psychometric Properties in Forced-Choice Tests: Comparing Binary and Graded Preference Formats Across Test Designs
      • 44
        Statistical foundations of person parameter estimation in the Thurstonian IRT model for forced-choice and pairwise comparison designs
      • 45
        Ipsativity indices for forced-choice assessments
      • 46
        A fit index for latent class analysis of dichotomous scale
      • 47
        What ipsative measures can tell us about the General Factor of Personality
      • 48
        Optimal Design in Linear Paired Comparisons for Thurstonian IRT models
    • Symposium : "Intervention programs evaluation: effect size, moderator variables and methodological quality" Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/9 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

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      • 49
        Convergent-discriminant validity evidence of the Methodological Quality Scale for Observational Methodology: A multitrait-multimethod analysis
      • 50
        The goodness of fit indexes RMSEA and SRMR using ULS and RULS in Structural Equation Modeling: a review of its cut-off point
      • 51
        Training program outcomes for mental health professionals: The role of methodological quality, study type, and timing. A meta-analysis
      • 52
        Risk of bias in clinical psychology meta-analyses (2000-2020): An overview
      • 53
        Effectiveness of psychoeducation on myositis: Quality of life and well-being
      • 54
        Validity evidence of the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) in Chilean patients with chronic kidney disease
    • Symposium : "Recent Developments in Meta-Analysis" Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/11 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

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      • 55
        Can We Include Dichotomous Variables in Meta-Analytic Structural Equation Modeling? Mind the Prevalence
      • 56
        Fitting two-level structural equation models to meta-analytic data
      • 57
        Reporting Biases Analyses in Psychological Meta-analyses: Current Practices and Robustness of Conclusions
      • 58
        Comparing Type I error and power rates in meta-regression with multiple effect sizes: A study of analytical approaches
      • 59
        Correcting for Publication Bias in Moderator Effects: A Simulation Study
      • 60
        Correcting for publication bias in multivariate and multilevel meta-analysis: A multivariate step function selection model approach
    • Poster Session 1: COFFEE BREAK / POSTERS Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/. - Foyer (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

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      • 61
        Conditions of education and methodological preferences of young researchers - results from preliminary studies
      • 62
        A Comparative Study of Dynamic Structural Equation Modeling and Structural Equation Modeling in Longitudinal Actor-Partner Interdependence (APIM) Mediation Analysis
      • 63
        Comparative Analysis of EEG Acquisition Systems: Neuroscan with EasyCap vs. OpenBCI with Florida Research Cap
      • 64
        Linking Evidence-Based Architectural Research Methodologies with Medical/Health Sciences: A Qualitative and Mixed-Methods Framework for Infection Prevention in Healthcare Facilities
      • 65
        Speech Analysis Module: An Open-Source Audio Processing Library for Onset Detection and Stimuli Preparation in Psycholinguistics
      • 66
        Visual Strategies in Educational Assessment: An Analysis of Eye Movements in Multiple-Choice Item Resolution
      • 67
        A Cautionary Note on Simulating Multilevel Data
      • 68
        A quantitative approach to the evaluation of response processes.
      • 69
        Analysis of the Prevalence of Child Sexual Abuse by Geographical Area.
      • 70
        Applying Growth Mixture Models to the longitudinal study of depressive symptomatology
      • 71
        Citation Bias in Ego Depletion Research: A Follow-Up to Hardwicke et al. (2021)
      • 72
        Deep Learning -Based Approaches for Continuous-Time Dynamical Systems
      • 73
        Developing a Child-Centered Instrument to Measure School Well-Being in Early Childhood: A Mixed-Methods Approach
      • 74
        Effect of Physical Activity on Total Gestational Weight Gain, Adherence to IOM 2009 Recommendations, and Incidence of Gestational Diabetes Mellitus: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
      • 75
        Evaluation and intervention in a case of mild cognitive impairment, amnestic subtype
      • 76
        Interviews in the Digital Age: Comparing Data from Online and Face-to-Face Methods
      • 77
        Investigating Teacher Candidates' Attitudes Toward Scientific Research: A Methodological Approach
      • 78
        Longitudinal Stability of Repeated Covariate Equating in High-Stakes Assessments
      • 79
        Meta-Analysis on the Effectiveness of Psychological Interventions: A Study on Replicability and Reproducibility
      • 80
        Mindfulness in Psychotherapist Education: Feasibility and Effects on Psychological Well-being
      • 81
        Multilevel Models in Single-Case Design: A Systematic Review of Existing Research and Gaps
      • 82
        Reporting of standard deviations and pre-post correlations: implications for effect size estimation in meta-analysis.
      • 83
        The JD-R Model in Volunteering: A Longitudinal Approach to Estimation and Missing Data Treatment
      • 84
        Understanding Patterns of Technology Engagement among Students: A Latent Profile Analysis
    • 12:00
      OFFICIAL OPENING
    • KEY NOTE: Rethinking Measurement for the 21st Century Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid) Guajara Campus/0 - Assembly Hall (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid) Guajara Campus/0 - Assembly Hall

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      • 85
        KEY NOTE: Rethinking Measurement for the 21st Century

        As public trust in standardized testing declines, AI-driven methods such as machine learning and natural language processing are increasingly being applied to optimize traditional measurement approaches. While these innovations offer important gains in efficiency, cost, and scalability, there is a risk that, without also addressing broader concerns of trust, equity, and relevance, psychometrics may become increasingly disconnected from evolving scientific standards, societal needs, and ethical principles.
        Psychometrics has been instrumental in establishing psychology and education as scientific disciplines, sharpening clinical diagnosis, advancing prevention, promoting educational equity, and exposing systemic inequities. Yet, as we navigate the complexities of an increasingly diverse and technology driven 21st century, it is necessary to ask whether our current assessments, still largely grounded in 20th-century measurement theories and assumptions, are adequately equipped to meet the evolving needs of today’s test users.
        This presentation offers a critical yet constructive reflection on how fragmented assessment systems, outdated assumptions, and rigid adherence to technical standards detached from the lived realities of those being assessed can unintentionally limit our collective impact and overlook opportunities to better serve society. By revisiting classic debates, I invite us to question long-held measurement mantras and consider how the field can evolve to better serve a rapidly changing world. Through concrete examples, I advocate for assessment systems that are responsive to real-world contexts, address the diverse needs of test users, and thoughtfully balance implementation trade-offs by considering opportunity costs.
        Ultimately, aligning psychometrics with the demands of the 21st century will position us to leverage AI-driven methods not only to optimize traditional measurement, but also to become more scientifically interdisciplinary, socially responsive, and ethically grounded in advancing societal progress.

    • 13:30
      LUNCH
    • Session 16 : "Mixed methods and Behavior assessment" Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/12 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

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      • 86
        A Mixed-Method Network Analysis Approach for Enhancing the Development of Assessment Instruments and Obtaining Validity Evidence: A Questionnaire to Measure Police Officers Attitudes towards Intervention in Gender-Based Violence
      • 87
        The value of mixed methods research over the present decade in Psychology: A critique study
      • 88
        A systematic review and an internal consistency analysis of behavioral habit measures
      • 89
        The Environmental Decision Task: A new behavioral paradigm for studying the money-environment trade-off
      • 90
        The advancements in mixed methods research over the present decade as outlined in the Journal of Mixed Methods Research: A scoping review
    • Session 7 : "Clustering and classification methods in psychology" Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/13 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

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      • 91
        Multiphase Optimization Strategy (MOST) for Equitable Cluster Randomized Interventions: Design Considerations and Statistical Modeling
      • 92
        Using the Stochastic Block Model for Clustering in Psychological Networks
      • 93
        Some Simple Methods for Creating a Pooled Cluster Solution using K-Means Clustering in Multiply Imputed Data
      • 94
        Clusterwise-IVA: a new method to uncover patient heterogeneity by clustering subjects based on temporal changes in underlying processes
      • 95
        Method for Sample Size Determination for Cluster Randomised Trials Using the Bayes Factor
      • 96
        Bayesian Sample Size Determination for Longitudinal Trials with Attrition
    • Session 9 : "Psychometric Applications in Health and Wellbeing"
      • 97
        Intersectional sleep disparities: association between multiple social intersections, perceived neighborhood deprivation and sleep disturbance in Europe
      • 98
        Decision Tree-Based Adaptive Testing in Psychodiagnostic Screening of multiple mental health conditions
      • 99
        What do patients and surgeons know and believe about shared decision-making when choosing treatments for colorectal cancer? A qualitative work in progress
      • 100
        Sex-Based Differential Item Functioning in the Broad Autism Phenotype-International Test
      • 101
        Proposing an enhanced continous norming approach for non-normal data and nonlinear trends in adapting the WISC-V to the Basque language
      • 102
        Methodological quality of meta-analyses and systematic reviews on the psychological interventions for breast cancer: An Umbrella Review of Their Effects on Anxiety, Depression, Distress, and Quality of Life
    • Symposium : "Artificial Intelligence and Large Language Models: Item Development and Validation, Educational Interventions, and Emotion Analysis of Videos" Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/9 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

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      • 103
        Leveraging AI Tutors to Enhance Student Learning: A Controlled Educational Intervention Study
      • 104
        Generative Psychometrics via AI-GENIE: Automatic Item Generation and Validation via Network-Integrated Evaluation
      • 105
        Performance-Based Item Development and Validation in Silica: LLMs and Generative Psychometrics for Struc- tural Validity and Item Difficulty
      • 106
        Decoding Emotion Dynamics in Videos using Dynamic Exploratory Graph Analysis and Zero-Shot Image Classification.
    • Symposium : "Innovations in test development and validation" Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/10 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

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      • 107
        Constructing, Improving, and Shortening Tests for Skill Assessment with Competence-based Test Development
      • 108
        Exploratory Structural Equation Modeling (ESEM) in Comparison with CFA Models
      • 109
        Addressing Ordinal Variables through Integrated IRT and CTT Methods in Cultural Capital Measurement
      • 110
        On the Way to State Specific Response Errors: A Generalized Local Independence Model
      • 111
        Probabilistic Information and Network Evaluation System (PINES): A Bayesian Framework for Advancing Psychometric Testing
    • STATE OF THE ART: AI: Where Are We and Where Are We Going
      • 112
        STATE OF THE ART: AI: Where Are We and Where Are We Going Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/13 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

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        This talk explores the core principles and practical applications of AI. We begin by defining AI as the discipline that imbues machines with human-like intelligence, encompassing reasoning, learning, and creativity. Key characteristics include the ability to perceive, interact, solve problems, act autonomously, and adapt to environments. We will cover the diverse problems AI addresses, such as classification, regression, prediction, clustering, optimization, and Natural Language Processing (NLP), alongside content generation. The presentation traces AI's evolution from symbolic AI to Machine Learning, Deep Learning, and the transformative rise of Generative AI. We will delve into Large Language Models (LLMs) like GPT and GEMINI and the current technologies based on Agentic AI. The global impact of AI is undeniable, with its interdisciplinary nature driving widespread applications across various sectors, significantly improving efficiency and enabling new capabilities worldwide. The presentation will finish analysing the profound influence of this technology on education and research. AI's intrinsic capabilities in learning, reasoning, communication, and creativity are directly applicable, assisting with academic text analysis, content creation, and report generation. In this scenario AI is becoming an indispensable assistant for students, reasearchers and educators alike, with autonomous AI Agents poised to further revolutionize these fields.

    • STATE OF THE ART: On Transforming Revisited Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/13 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

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      • 113
        STATE OF THE ART: On Transforming Revisited Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/13 - Room

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        In this State of the Art Address, I revisit and extend the conceptual boundaries of two core mixed methods transformation techniques: qualitizing and quantitizing. In so doing, I spotlight the expanded methodological and philosophical dimensions that elevate their application in contemporary mixed methods research. The first third of the presentation is dedicated to qualitizing, defined as the transformation of quantitative data into qualitative form that can be analyzed qualitatively. I will outline how qualitizing has evolved to include five major elements: (1) it can yield numerous representations (e.g., narratives, profiles), (2) it can stem from either quantitative or qualitative data, (3) it may involve either qualitative or quantitative analyses, (4) it can be applied as a single or multiple analyses, and (5) it can produce a fully integrated analysis. Special emphasis will be placed on narrative profile formation—such as modal, average, holistic, comparative, and normative profiles—which allows for rich, contextualized interpretations of numerical data.
        In the second third of the address, I will introduce the DIME-Driven Model of Quantitizing, which encompasses four core classes of Level 1 quantitizing:
        • Descriptive-Based Quantitizing transforms qualitative data into quantitative metrics to summarize patterns using measures such as mean, standard deviation, percentiles, and skewness.
        • Inferential-Based Quantitizing involves converting qualitative data into formats suitable for statistical inference, including tests such as analysis of variance (ANOVA), regression, and structural equation modeling.
        • Measurement-Based Quantitizing refers to the transformation of qualitative insights into quantifiable constructs for instrument development and validation, often using techniques such as Rasch modeling and Item Response Theory (IRT).
        • Exploratory-Based Quantitizing converts qualitative data into numerical formats to explore underlying patterns, relationships, or structures through methods such as factor analysis, cluster analysis, and correspondence analysis.
        In this presentation, I will also introduce for the first time a novel concept, which I call Transformatizing. Transformatizing refers to the integrated process of applying both qualitizing and quantitizing techniques within a single analytical framework fully to harness and to interweave the strengths of qualitative and quantitative data transformations. It represents a dynamic, bidirectional approach wherein data are fluidly transformed across paradigms to achieve comprehensive, meta-integrative insights. Major components of transformatizing are QuanQualitizing and QualQuantitizing—both of which will be defined.
        To concretize these ideas, I will present a real example from the published literature that illustrates both QuanQualitizing and QualQuantitizing in action.
        Throughout the session, I will illustrate these expanded definitions with practical examples from diverse research contexts. Attendees will leave with a clearer understanding of how thoughtfully transforming data across traditions/paradigms not only enriches methodological rigor, but also facilitates deeper, more meaningful meta-inferences. I invite colleagues to consider how these advanced transformation techniques can further democratize evidence, foster integration, and propel mixed methods research into new frontiers.

    • Poster Session 2: COFFEE BREAK / POSTERS Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/. - Foyer (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

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      • 114
        Combining Prolonged Exposure and Compassion-Focused Therapy for PTSD: A Case of Multilevel Analysis for Single-Experimental Case Designs
      • 115
        Methodological differences between formative-measured and composite variables: a case study using mixed SEM techniques
      • 116
        Methodological Innovations in Forecasting the Global Burden of Antimicrobial Resistance: Integrating Predictive Modeling, Scenario Analysis and Data-Driven Insights
      • 117
        Prioritization of socio-political values while developing and implementing driverless mobility: a multi-method, multi-step intercultural research approximation
      • 118
        A comparison of algorithms for tests of variance components in genetics ACE models
      • 119
        An Applied Case of Longitudinal Factorial Invariance: data imputation, limitations and suggestions
      • 120
        An R package for applying meta-analytical procedures under a mixture model approach
      • 121
        Assessing Bias in Non-Randomized Studies: A Systematic Review of Evaluation Tools
      • 122
        Bayesian multilevel modeling of visual search trajectories: a simulation study and a hybrid foraging application
      • 123
        Beyond Classical Random Effects Meta-Analysis: Parametric Variance of the Specific Variance Estimator Under a Mixture Model Framework for Standardized Mean Difference
      • 124
        Bootstrap-F and adjusted F-tests in split-plot designs: The effect of non-sphericity and heterogeneity on Type I error
      • 125
        Effectiveness of Online Psychological and Psychoeducational Interventions in Preventing Maternal Perinatal Anxiety: A Preliminary Meta-Analysis of Randomized Controlled Trials
      • 126
        Exploring the Social Perception of Cyber-Sexual Exploitation: A Reflexive Thematic Analysis of Reactions toward “Amouranth Case” on X
      • 127
        Learning patterns and reading comprehension in primary education: a mixed methods approach
      • 128
        Measuring the dynamic structure of affect using a stepwise exploratory structural equational approach
      • 129
        Normative data on the execution age of action-related sentences in young and older adults
      • 131
        Robustness of repeated measures ANOVA with non-normal data and very small sample size
      • 132
        SUPERVISED MACHINE LEARNING MODELS FOR AUTOMATIC DETECTION OF MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS THROUGH ACOUSTIC ANALYSIS OF THE VOICE
      • 133
        Targeting the rSTS with tDCS to Modulate Attentional Bias in Bullied University Students with Low PTG
      • 134
        USE OF ARTIFICIAL INTELIGENCE IN CONTENT VALIDITY
      • 135
        Using an alternative technique of multidimensional scaling to compare three perceptual spaces of animal abuse
    • Session 13 : "Longitudinal models and Individual variability" Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/11 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

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      • 136
        Longitudinal diagnostic models for small sample size contexts
      • 137
        A Proposal to Test Approximate Measurement Invariance of Multi-Item Self-Reports Across Intense Longitudinal Assessments
      • 138
        The Invariance Partial Pruning Approach to The Network Comparison in Longitudinal Data
      • 139
        Commensurable indicators - finding potentially metric invariant indicators
    • Session 17 : "Sampling and Responses in experience sampling studies" Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/12 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

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      • 140
        Prediction Intervals for the Target Sample Size during Information-Based Monitoring
      • 141
        Tracking micro-minorities: methodological solutions to the challenge of small numbers
      • 142
        The distracted participant? Experience sampling response behavior and participant burden in social settings
      • 143
        An extensive evaluation of the stochastic countdown
      • 144
        Defining ratio effects in randomized controlled trials using a stochastic theory of causal effects
    • Session 21 : "Psychometric Innovations and Diagnostic Methodologies" Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/13 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

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      • 145
        Hospital Pedagogy and health in children and families. Contributions from observational methodology and mixed methods.
      • 146
        Cross-Validating Thematic Networks: An Explanatory Sequential Mixed Methods Study with Chronically Ill Students
      • 147
        Automated Scoring of Open-Ended Responses: Evaluating LLMs and Prompting Strategies
      • 148
        Rasch-Based Unidimensional Integration of the Most Widely Used Scales for Assessing Belief in a Just World
      • 149
        Using Cognitive Diagnostic Models for Criterion-Referenced Standard Setting in Legal Literacy Assessment
      • 150
        Validation of an Italian work-adapted Technostress Scale for older employees
      • 151
        Assessing Professionalism in Spanish Healthcare Contexts: Cultural Adaptation and Validation of the Profes- sionalism Mini-Evaluation Exercise (P-MEX)
    • Symposium : "Research methodologies in social cognition: A measurement approach from the Social Neurosciences." Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/9 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

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      • 152
        A systematic review of interventions designed to reduce alterations in social cognition
      • 153
        Exploring the Relationship between Fear of Public Speaking, Social Cognition, and Communication Skills in University Students
      • 154
        Analysis of the factor structure of the Yoni Task instrument for its cross-cultural validation in the Spanish- speaking population
      • 155
        The Internal Structure of Theory of Mind: Factorial Analysis of Its Evaluation Instruments
      • 156
        Challenges and limitations in the evaluation of theory of mind in Latin America: Methodological and contex- tual challenges.
    • Symposium : "Statistical Learning Approaches to Psychometric Modeling Challenges" Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/10 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

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      • 157
        Regularized Estimation of the Latent Space Item Response Theory Model
      • 158
        “Factor analysis”of Process Data via Psychology-Informed Variational Recurrent Autoencoders for the Anal- ysis of Critical Online Reasoning
      • 159
        Variational Autoencoders for Models with Latent Classes
      • 160
        Automated Essay Scoring Using Generative Artificial Intelligence: Illustration of a Systematic Evaluation Framework
    • 19:00
      MUSIC
    • 19:30
      INAUGURAL COCKTAIL
    • Session 14 : "Dynamic and temporal models in psychology" Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/13 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/13 - Room

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)

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      • 161
        Towards a Clearer Understanding of Causal Estimands: The Importance of Joint Effects in Longitudinal Designs with Time-Varying Treatments
      • 162
        Exploring heterogeneity in temporal dynamics with different extensions of time-varying coefficient models
      • 163
        Time-varying continuous-time models: Extending the framework for dynamic parameters that change over time
      • 164
        An investigation of the temporal dynamics of careless responding across different populations in experience sampling data
      • 165
        Mapping methodological variation in experience sampling research from design to data analysis: A systematic review
      • 166
        Beyond 'Accuracy': AI vs. Humans as Raters
    • Session 19 : "Advanced statistical models and trust in Science" Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/12 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/12 - Room

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)

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      • 167
        On The Interpretation of Vector Autoregressive Models
      • 168
        A sequence sensitive model of encoding precision
      • 169
        Extending MPT Models for Continuous Variables: A Comparison of Parametric and Non-Parametric Approaches
      • 170
        Towards a Global Predictive Model of Trust in Science
      • 171
        Integrative Pipelines for Preprocessing Mobile Sensing Data
      • 172
        A family of within-test operation-specific learning models
    • Symposium : "Correlation of cognitive variables with brain activity measured by EEG and fRMI" Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/9 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/9 - Room

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)

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      • 173
        Theory of mind and high abilities, EEG analysis
      • 174
        Emotional Synergy in Music-Color Combinations: A Neurophysiological Study
      • 175
        Electroencephalography as a Recording Method in Visual Photosensitivity
      • 176
        Resting-State Brain Activity and Connectivity in Individuals with High Cognitive Abilities
      • 177
        Study of Brain Activity at Resting State by Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging in People with High and Low Sensitivity
    • Symposium : "Standards and Guidelines for Educational and Psychological Assessment: Continuing the Conversation" Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/11 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/11 - Room

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)

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      • 178
        Difficult Conversations in Revising the Standards for Educational and Psychological Testing
      • 179
        The Role of the New PISA Quality Standards to Promote Fairness
      • 180
        The Role of the EFPA Board of Assessment in Promoting Testing Standards
      • 181
        Discussion about Current Standards and Guidelines for Educational and Psychological Assessment
    • Session 20: "IA y M learning" Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/13 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/13 - Room

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)

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      • 182
        Artificial Intelligence and learning: Contributions to the state of the art in Education
      • 183
        Machine Learning for Psychological Research: Benchmarking Forecasting Performance of Deep Learning Models for Longitudinal Data
      • 184
        AI and students learning of Mathematics: A bibliometric study
      • 185
        Model IA European MathIA Project
      • 186
        Incorporating longitudinal variability in prediction models: a comparison of machine learning and logistic regression
    • Session 3 : "Measurement and Analysis of violence and discrimination" Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/12 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/12 - Room

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)

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      • 187
        Measurement structure and invariance of intimate partner violence against women in lower- and middle-income countries
      • 188
        Understanding Perceived Vulnerability to Intimate Partner Violence: A Bifactor(S-1) Model Exploring the Role of Sexism and Violence Myths Against Women
      • 189
        Advancing Quantitative Methodologies to Achieve Equity
      • 190
        What is a 'resilient' symptom network? Assessing multiple response trajectories to stressful events using network theory
      • 191
        Investigating Differential Item Functioning of the Reading Comprehension Section of a High-Stakes Test across Booklet and Gender: An Analysis with Recursive Partitioning Rasch Tree
      • 192
        Enhancing Model Visualization in Statistical Analysis: Introducing the R Package MoPlot
    • Session 4 : "Structural equation models and model evaluation" Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/11 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/11 - Room

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)

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      • 193
        Chasing Normal Linear Unicorns -- More Realistic Fit Indices for SEM
      • 194
        Abandon All Thumbs Ye Who Model: Model Fit Evaluation in SEM for a New Century
      • 195
        SEMtrees in Longitudinal studies: The utility of goodness-of-fit indices for building theory
      • 196
        Regularised SEM-Based Out-of-Sample Predictions
      • 197
        Residual Dynamic Structural Equation Modeling for Analyzing Interindividual Variability in Intensive Data from Factorial Experiments
    • Symposium : "Innovative Approaches to Address Validity" Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/9 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/9 - Room

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)

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      • 198
        Building and Validating Culturally Responsive Assessments
      • 199
        Mapping construct representations: Integrative approaches to Content Validity and Latent structures
      • 200
        Collecting Validity Evidence Through the Measurement of Eye Movement
      • 201
        Improving web probing method to obtain validity evidence of response processes by an AI generative app
    • Symposium : "Measurement and Machine Learning" Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/10 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/10 - Room

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)

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      • 202
        About the (Non-) Invariance of Sensing Data
      • 203
        The Impact of Measurement Non-invariance in Target Variables on Machine Learning Prediction
      • 204
        Addressing Measurement Error in Machine Learning-Assisted Social Science Modeling
      • 205
        A Machine Learning-Based Workflow for Model Evaluation and Revision in SEM
    • Poster Session 3: COFFEE BREAK / POSTERS Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/. - Foyer (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/. - Foyer

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)

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      • 206
        Dilemmas and Methodological Challenges in Research on Older Adults
      • 207
        An Exploration of R-squared Effect Size Measures in Mediation
      • 208
        Assessing Fear of Heterosexism: Spanish Adaptation and Validation of a Psychological Measure
      • 209
        Employing item response theory and factor analysis to purify latent trait estimates
      • 210
        Psychometric Properties of the Interpersonal Rejection Sensitivity Scale (IRSS) in a Spanish Sample: Factor Structure, Reliability, and Measurement Invariance
      • 211
        A multilevel Ornstein–Uhlenbeck process with crossed random effects for multivariate time series
      • 212
        Assessing false recognition with ad hoc categorical, associative and taxonomic lists.
      • 213
        Coping Flexibility Among Young Adults from Six Countries: Cross-Cultural Validation of the Coping Flexibility Scale (CFS)
      • 214
        Development and Content Validation of the Advance Care Planning Attitudes Scale for Mental Health: Incorporating Mental Health Service Users’ Perspectives
      • 215
        Differential item functioning in online health-information seeking measurement
      • 216
        Effect of Class Imbalance and Multicollinearity on Parameter Estimation in Binary Logistic Regression
      • 217
        Evaluating assumptions on variance magnitude in repeated measures designs: an empirical evaluation
      • 218
        Evaluation of competence in dementia care among formal caregivers: Adaptation of the Sense of Competence in Dementia Care Staff scale (SCIDS) to Spanish
      • 219
        How to use observable responses and hidden states of recurrent neural networks to reason about cognitive aspects of language?
      • 220
        Latent Trait-State-Occasions models to analyze state and trait components of Loneliness in European adults and their associations with social contact
      • 221
        Psychometric properties of Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support in Spanish university students
      • 222
        Purifying the ability from external variables.
      • 223
        Reevaluating Factor Analysis: Violations of the Reflective Measurement Model and a Proposed Correction for Item Selection Bias.
      • 225
        Type I error of repeated measures ANOVA with non-sphericity and very extreme deviation from normality
      • 226
        Validation of the Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support (MSPSS) in Mental Health Service Users
    • STATE OF ART: The past, present and future of meta-analytic structural equation modeling Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/12 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/12 - Room

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)

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      • 227
        STATE OF ART: The past, present and future of meta-analytic structural equation modeling

        Meta-analytic structural equation modeling (MASEM), originally referred to as model-based meta-analysis, involves testing structural equation models on meta-analytic data. The technique is being applied in a broad range of fields, including education, psychology, environmental research, information security, medicine, and ecology. In this talk I will outline various methods that can be used to apply MASEM. I will explain how different methods may lead to different (possibly incorrect) conclusions, and consider the pros and cons of the methods currently available. As MASEM is a relatively new technique, there are many opportunities to extend existing approaches, enabling researchers to make better use of available data. Examples of necessary developments include the analysis of dependent effect sizes, handling effect size heterogeneity, synthesizing raw data, analyzing mean structures and evaluating model fit. I will therefore conclude my talk by presenting a research agenda for MASEM.

    • STATE OF THE ART: Big data
      • 228
        STATE OF THE ART: Big data

        To do.

    • KEY NOTE: Careless Responding in Survey Research: Is There Hope? Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid) Guajara Campus/0 - Assembly Hall (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid) Guajara Campus/0 - Assembly Hall

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)

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      • 229
        KEY NOTE: Careless Responding in Survey Research: Is There Hope?

        In survey research, especially under unsupervised online conditions, careless responding—also referred to as insufficient effort responding—remains a significant threat to data quality. When respondents fail to engage meaningfully with questionnaire content, the resulting bias can weaken psychometric properties, distort correlations, and lead to erroneous conclusions. Recent estimates place the prevalence of careless responding between 10% and 40%, depending on survey design, context, and detection methods (Kam & Meyer, 2015; Oppenheimer et al., 2009; Ward et al., 2017). This keynote will synthesize current evidence on best practices for preventing, detecting, and managing careless responding.
        Prevention strategies should reflect the dual nature of careless responding. Empirical evidence, including recent longitudinal studies from our own team, indicates that response attentiveness can vary across time and context, and may be influenced by both individual traits and situational demands (e.g., Tomas et al., 2024; Hasselhorn et al., 2023).Some individuals are consistently attentive or inattentive (trait-like), while others shift depending on situational context—such as fatigue, time pressure, or lack of interest. To address both patterns, researchers should combine context-sensitive strategies (e.g., optimizing survey length or timing) with broader, person-focused approaches like motivational instructions or commitment pledges, which can reduce carelessness even among those predisposed to inattention.
        Detection strategies should be multifaceted. While attention check items offer a direct, in-survey method to flag inattentiveness, their effectiveness may decline over time as participants become familiar with them (Kam & Chan, 2018). Post-hoc statistical indices such as longstring response patterns, psychometric synonyms/antonyms, and Mahalanobis distance can be useful (Yentes, 2023), although researchers are encouraged to adopt model-based techniques, such as constrained factor and IRT mixture models (e.g. Kam & Cheung, 2023; Ulitzsch et al., 2022) and multilevel latent class analyses (Hasselhorn et al., 2023), which allow for the classification of random, patterned, and attentive respondents—without the need for additional survey items.
        Managing careless responding requires more than simply discarding data. Once CR has been detected, researchers must make thoughtful decisions about how to handle it. Model-based approaches, such as constrained factor mixture models, can help disentangle trait-relevant from trait-irrelevant response patterns at the group level. However, Edwards (2019) recommends alternative strategies, such as statistically controlling for CR indices or using them as moderator variables in substantive models. These approaches acknowledge that CR can systematically influence results and should be modeled—not merely eliminated—to preserve data quality and enhance replicability.
        There is hope—but only if we treat careless responding as a central concern rather than a peripheral nuisance. By integrating prevention, detection, and thoughtful data management strategies, researchers can substantially improve data quality in health and social sciences. Thus, researchers should adopt rigorous and transparent practices in dealing with careless responding in survey research.

    • 13:30
      LUNCH
    • Session 1 : "Development and validation of psychometric instruments" Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/12 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/12 - Room

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)

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      • 230
        Choose your own PAS? Studying the validity of the Perceptual Awareness Scale
      • 231
        Exploring the stability and temporal variability of Consideration of Future Consequences (CCF): A Trait-State-Occasion (TSO) model.
      • 232
        Evidence of the validity of the Cognitive Reserve Scale (CRS, Escala de Reserva Cognitiva, ERC). Cognitive reserve as a protective factor against the risk of violence in youth.
      • 233
        First steps in the construction of a new item pool to adaptively measure numerical reasoning in university students
      • 234
        Using confirmatory factor analysis as tool for discriminating between attribute and method effects
      • 235
        BERO: A New Perspective on the Psychometric Assessment of Socially Aversive Traits
    • Session 15 : "Multilevel models and Individual differences" Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/13 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/13 - Room

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)

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      • 236
        Comparing nested multilevel models with the Vuong test
      • 237
        Predicting Intersectional Inequalities Using Multilevel Analysis of Individual Heterogeneity and Discriminatory Accuracy (MAIHDA)
      • 238
        semnova: An R Package for Investigating Interindividual Differences in Experimental Effects on Latent Variables
      • 239
        Pooling Correlation Matrices in Meta-Analysis: Addressing Hierarchical Effect Size Dependencies
      • 240
        A Multi-Method Approach to Investigating Between-Group Differences in Latent Variables
    • Symposium : "Advances in Investigating Response Behavior" Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/10 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/10 - Room

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)

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      • 241
        The Influence of Time of Day on the Occurrence of Careless and Insufficient Effort Responding
      • 242
        Real-time detection of unmotivated response behavior in questionnaires - Can immediate feedback influence future response behavior?
      • 243
        Experimental Validation of Model-Based Identification of Careless and Insufficient Effort Responding
      • 244
        A Multilevel Mixture Item Response Theory Model for Partial Engagement in Proficiency Tests
      • 245
        Investigating the interplay of text rereads with IRT parameters: Rereads render hard items easier and easy items harder
      • 246
        Benefits of Process Data for Evaluating the Differential Effectiveness of App-Based Treatments
    • Symposium : "Advancing Dynamic Methods for Modeling Change Over Time" Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/11 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/11 - Room

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)

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      • 247
        Modeling overnight lags in daily emotion dynamics
      • 248
        Kalman scores for the estimation of planned and unplanned missing individual observations in accelerated longitudinal designs
      • 249
        State-Space Models for Identifying Abrupt Changes in Cognitive Development
      • 250
        When Should I Measure? Finding the Best Sampling Schedule for Recovering Longitudinal Dynamics in Panel Data Studies with Continuous-Time Models
    • Symposium : "Methodological Advances in Meta-analysis" Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/9 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/9 - Room

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)

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      • 251
        Visualization of heterogeneity in forest plots
      • 252
        Relationship between repeated measures in clinical psychology studies: an empirical evaluation
      • 253
        Bias and Mean Squared Error of Six Estimators of the Standardized Mean Change in Pretest-Posttest Designs
      • 254
        An improved homogeneity test for meta-analysis of standardized mean differences
      • 255
        Statistical power of random-effects meta-analyses of clinical psychological interventions
      • 256
        Reliability generalization of the Emotional Quotient Inventory Youth Version (EQ-i: YV): A meta-analytic structural equation modelling approach
    • STATE OF THE ART: Dealing with publication bias in a meta-analysis Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/12 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/12 - Room

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)

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      • 257
        STATE OF THE ART: Dealing with publication bias in a meta-analysis

        Meta-analysis is the statistical methodology to synthesize findings across multiple studies. However, publication bias is arguably one of the most important threats to the validity of a meta-analysis. One major consequence of publication bias is overestimation of the meta-analytic effect size. To address this, various methods have been developed to correct for publication bias in a meta-analysis and also to test for its presence.
        This presentation will start with providing a short overview of evidence for the presence of publication bias in the literature. I will then introduce several methods to test and correct for publication bias in a meta-analysis. Both traditional methods (e.g., fail-safe N and the trim-and-fill method) and nowadays recommended methods (e.g., selection model approaches and regression based methods) will be discussed. Finally, I will highlight recent advances in the field and outline directions for future research.

    • STATE OF THE ART: Educational programs evaluation Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/13 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/13 - Room

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)

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      • 258
        STATE OF THE ART: Educational programs evaluation

        To do

    • Poster Session 4 Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/. - Foyer (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/. - Foyer

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)

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      • 259
        Global versus domain-specific scores in the measurement of cognition: A study of the differences in correlations with relevant criteria
      • 260
        Adaptation and Validation of the the Philosophy of Social Science Inventory (PSSI) in Polish Cultural Context
      • 261
        An Empirical Network Analysis of the Carnism Structure based on the 4N Scale: Spanish and English Versions
      • 262
        Application of Exploratory Graph Analysis (EGA) to a scale of depressive symptomatology
      • 263
        Assessing the Performance of the Healthcare Access and Quality Index: A Methodological Challenge in Global Health Metrics
      • 264
        Development and Validation of the Sport Causality Orientations Scale (SCOS)
      • 265
        Location-Scale Models in Meta-Analysis: A Comparison of Analytic Frameworks
      • 266
        Measurement invariance and latent mean differences across Basque and Spanish versions of the Multidimensional Frailty Scale (MFS)
      • 267
        Modeling difficulty of listening comprehension items with machine learning
      • 268
        Network Analysis of the Illness Management and Recovery Scale (IMR) in Individuals with Mental Disorders
      • 269
        Psychometric properties of the Brief Resilient Coping Scale (BRCS): A first study of its longitudinal measurement invariance in the Spanish context
      • 270
        Psychometric Properties of the Online Version of the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) for its Use in Spanish Pregnant and Postpartum Women.
      • 271
        PSYCHOMETRIC PROPERTIES OF THE ROSENBERG SELF-ESTEEM SCALE IN PATIENTS DIAGNOSED WITH BREAST CANCER
      • 272
        Psychometric properties of the Scientific Reasoning Scale
      • 273
        Psychometric validation of the Reported and Intended Behaviour Scale (RIBS) in the Spanish-speaking population
      • 274
        Response Options in Multiple-Choice Items: Increased Difficulty or Improved Reasoning?
      • 275
        The 20-item and 10-item Spanish versions of the Positive and Negative Affect Schedule (PANAS): Psychometric properties in a sample of nursing students
      • 276
        The Madrid Loneliness Questionnaire (MLQ): Development and Validation in the Contemporary Sociocultural Context
      • 277
        The Workplace Ostracism Scale: A Reliability Generalization Meta-Analysis
      • 278
        Using machine learning on multiple true-false item texts to predict the difficulty of best single-answer items: Identifying domain-specific text features beyond readability
      • 279
        Validation of the Spanish Gaming Transfer Phenomena Scale
      • 280
        Validation of the Spanish Nijmegen Gender Awareness in Medicine Scale (SN-GAMS) in Clinical Psychology Students
      • 281
        Addressing Overfactoring in Mixed-Worded Scales: An Exploratory Application of the Random Intercept Item Factor Analysis (RIIFA)
    • 17:30
      PLENARY
    • 21:00
      DINNER
    • Session 18 : "Latent factors and errors in psychometric measurement" Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/12 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/12 - Room

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)

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      • 282
        Factor Analysis under multimodal latent distributions: A simulation study
      • 283
        Initial Attempts to Clean Up the Messy Middle Problem
      • 284
        Unpacking the Impact of Measurement Error and Outliers on Three-Way Interactions: Evidence from Monte Carlo Simulations with Best-Practice Recommendations
      • 285
        Added value of subscores: Can we accurately evaluate it?
      • 286
        Addressing convergence problems in latent variable models
      • 287
        From Random Effects to Common Factors: Latent Dimensionality Assessment in Experimental Psychology
    • Session 5 : "Bayesian methods in Psychology and Statistics" Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/11 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/11 - Room

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)

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      • 288
        Where Psychometrics Meets Experimental Psychology: Bayesian Hierarchical Factor Models for Response Times
      • 289
        Exploratory Bayesian Nonparametric Methods in Psychological Sciences
      • 290
        Estimating Context Effects in Small Samples while Controlling for Covariates: An Optimally Regularized Bayesian Estimator for Multilevel Latent Variable Models
      • 291
        Extending Bayesian Regularization Methods to Multiple-Group Mediation Analysis
      • 292
        What Do We Not Know About Small Sample Performance of AR(1) Models?
      • 293
        Multiple imputation of incomplete non-linear terms, when sample size is extremely small
    • Symposium : "Bridging Psychometrics and Artificial Intelligence" Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/9 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/9 - Room

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)

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      • 294
        Optimizing LLM Embeddings for Automatic Item Development and Validation
      • 295
        Does the result of an in-silica structural validity matches the structural validity computed in human-gathered data?
      • 296
        How Block Types and Social Desirability Shape Forced-Choice Questionnaire Automatic Assembly
      • 297
        Predicting Item Response Theory Parameters from the Semantic Space of Computational Language Models
    • Symposium : "Observational methodology" Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/10 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/10 - Room

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)

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      • 298
        Preliminary Convergent-Discriminant Validity Evidence of the Methodological Quality Scale for Observational Methodology (MQSOM). A Confirmatory Factor Analysis
      • 299
        Evaluating Methodological Quality in Football Studies: An Application of the MQSOM
      • 300
        Methodological Quality Profiles in Basketball: A Systematic Review of Studies based on Observational Methodology
    • Symposium : "Understanding, detecting and managing careless responding in survey research." Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/13 - Room (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)/13 - Room

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)

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      • 301
        Understanding, detecting and managing careless responding in survey research.
      • 302
        Testing the stability of careless responding over time
      • 303
        Detecting and managing careless and insufficient effort responding: A simulation approach
      • 304
        Detecting careless responding in ipsative data
      • 305
        Detecting careless and insufficient effort responding: A comparison of attention check and model-based approaches
    • PANEL: Gender issues in research and methodology
    • 11:30
      COFFEE BREAK
    • KEY NOTE: The Integrated Mixed Methods Transformation Approach Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid) Guajara Campus/0 - Assembly Hall (Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid))

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid) Guajara Campus/0 - Assembly Hall

      Faculty of Social Sciences and Communication. (The Pyramid)

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      • 306
        KEY NOTE: The Integrated Mixed Methods Transformation Approach

        The field of mixed methods research continues to evolve, pushing the boundaries of methodological innovation to address complex and multifaceted research problems. This keynote address introduces the Integrated Mixed Methods Transformation Approach (IMMTA) as a meta-framework that systematically transforms monomethod research designs into fully integrated mixed methods research approaches. IMMTA fosters seamless integration of qualitative and quantitative elements across all research stages, resulting in richer, more comprehensive findings and maximizing methodological rigor. By embedding integration at all phases—design, data collection, analysis, and interpretation—IMMTA enhances the depth and applicability of research, particularly in interdisciplinary settings such as those at RAND.
        In the second part of my keynote address, I will explore Critical Dialectical Pluralism (CDP) 2.0, an evolution of its predecessor, CDP 1.0, now positioned as a transformative multidimensional metaparadigm and metaphilosophy for mixed methods research. Grounded in the five pillars of social justice, inclusion, diversity, equity, and social responsibility (SIDES), CDP 2.0 represents a shift toward socially responsive and ethically engaged research practices. This meta-framework promotes participant empowerment by redefining their role as co-researchers and challenges traditional research hierarchies to foster an egalitarian and impactful research paradigm.
        By bridging IMMTA and CDP 2.0, this keynote address offers a transformative perspective on mixed methods research, one that is methodologically rigorous and ethically profound. Attendees will leave with an enriched understanding of how to apply these paradigms to advance research, making an impact on policy and practice. This session promises to be a forward-looking discussion that reimagines the future of integrated research methodologies.

    • 13:00
      IN MEMORIAM SESSION
    • 13:30
      CLOSING CEREMONY