Calculating N of Possible Answers on Filtered Tests

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on deriving a formula to calculate the number of possible answer paths in a filtered test format, where a participant must select a passing response to continue. The initial approach involves calculating the number of ways to fail and proceed for each question based on the number of passing and failing options. A participant shared a preliminary formula using specific notation to represent total answer possibilities and the number of correct and incorrect answers for each test item. Suggestions were made to refine the formula, including incorporating edge cases and simplifying expressions. Overall, the conversation aims to clarify the mathematical representation of answer paths in filtered tests.
psychometriko
Messages
3
Reaction score
0
Hopefully I'm posting this to the appropriate section. I am trying to figure out a formula for describing the number of possible answer "paths" that may be taken by an individual who is administered a filtered test format. In the filtered test format, the individual must select a passing response to item j in order to proceed to item j + 1. If the individual selects a failing option, the test is over. My question is, given that each of the items on the test can have different numbers of passing and failing options (e.g., item j might have two passing options and three failing options, item j + 1 might have one passing option and two failing options), how can I even begin to figure out how to put this down mathematically on paper? My math background is rather weak, so I'm not really even sure where to start. Any help would be much appreciated!
 
Physics news on Phys.org


You can calculate it step by step: For the first question, there are n1 answers, c1 of them are correct. Therefore, you have n1-c1 ways to fail the test, and c1 ways to proceed.

The second question has n2 answers, c2 of them are correct. For each way to reach this question, you have nn-cn ways to fail the test, and c2 ways to proceed.

Does that help?
You can get a general formula using this approach, too.
 


Thanks for the reply. After I posted this I actually worked out a formula, but it's really clunky and I couldn't really say how I derived it. Here's what I have (by the way I'm uploading a JPG for this because I know if I tried to type it in I would screw it up real nice).

Explanation of notation:
M = total number of answer possibilities (number of "paths")
k = 1,...,K is the number of items on the test
V is the total number of answer choices on item k
VkP is the number of passing answers on item k
VkF is the number of failing answers on item k
Hence, VK is the total number of answer choices on the last (Kth) item on the test, and V1F is the number of failing answers on the first item (k = 1) on the test. (And in the last term in the formula, n is used as an arbitrary index.)

Any advice for making this prettier/more efficient?

Thanks!


mfb said:
You can calculate it step by step: For the first question, there are n1 answers, c1 of them are correct. Therefore, you have n1-c1 ways to fail the test, and c1 ways to proceed.

The second question has n2 answers, c2 of them are correct. For each way to reach this question, you have nn-cn ways to fail the test, and c2 ways to proceed.

Does that help?
You can get a general formula using this approach, too.
 

Attachments

  • formula.jpg
    formula.jpg
    6.3 KB · Views: 467


I did not check all indices, but the formula looks good. I think you can include V_1^F in the last expression, using the convention that an empty product (from n=1 to n=0) is 1.

In the same way, you can include the case "n-1 correct answers and failed at the last one" there, which simplifies the first part a bit.
 


Great, thanks for the tips!

mfb said:
I did not check all indices, but the formula looks good. I think you can include V_1^F in the last expression, using the convention that an empty product (from n=1 to n=0) is 1.

In the same way, you can include the case "n-1 correct answers and failed at the last one" there, which simplifies the first part a bit.
 
I'm taking a look at intuitionistic propositional logic (IPL). Basically it exclude Double Negation Elimination (DNE) from the set of axiom schemas replacing it with Ex falso quodlibet: ⊥ → p for any proposition p (including both atomic and composite propositions). In IPL, for instance, the Law of Excluded Middle (LEM) p ∨ ¬p is no longer a theorem. My question: aside from the logic formal perspective, is IPL supposed to model/address some specific "kind of world" ? Thanks.
I was reading a Bachelor thesis on Peano Arithmetic (PA). PA has the following axioms (not including the induction schema): $$\begin{align} & (A1) ~~~~ \forall x \neg (x + 1 = 0) \nonumber \\ & (A2) ~~~~ \forall xy (x + 1 =y + 1 \to x = y) \nonumber \\ & (A3) ~~~~ \forall x (x + 0 = x) \nonumber \\ & (A4) ~~~~ \forall xy (x + (y +1) = (x + y ) + 1) \nonumber \\ & (A5) ~~~~ \forall x (x \cdot 0 = 0) \nonumber \\ & (A6) ~~~~ \forall xy (x \cdot (y + 1) = (x \cdot y) + x) \nonumber...
Back
Top