Authors
Patrick E Shrout, Robert L Spitzer, Joseph L Fleiss
Publication date
1987/2/1
Journal
Archives of general Psychiatry
Volume
44
Issue
2
Pages
172-177
Publisher
American Medical Association
Description
Eighteen years ago in this journal, Spitzer and colleagues1published "Quantification of Agreement in Psychiatric Diagnosis," in which they argued that a new measure, Cohen's k statistic,2was the appropriate index of diagnostic agreement in psychiatry. They pointed out that other measures of diagnostic reliability then in use, such as the total percent agreement and the contingency coefficient, were flawed as indexes of agreement since they either overestimated the discriminating power of the diagnosticians or were affected by associations among the diagnoses other than strict agreement. The new statistic seemed to overcome the weaknesses of the other measures. It took into account the fact that raters agree by chance alone some of the time, and it only gave a perfect value if there was total agreement among the raters. Furthermore, generalizations of the simple k statistic were already available. This family of …
Total citations
198719881989199019911992199319941995199619971998199920002001200220032004200520062007200820092010201120122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320246101620541415201012191815914161312129914119713171071245547712
Scholar articles
PE Shrout, RL Spitzer, JL Fleiss - Archives of general Psychiatry, 1987