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intraklassen

Intraklassen, in statistics commonly referred to as the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC), is a measure of reliability that evaluates how strongly units within the same group resemble each other. It is used when data are clustered or when ratings are produced by different observers, to determine how much of the total variance arises from differences between groups versus variation within groups.

There are several forms of the ICC, depending on the statistical model and the question at hand

Interpretation guidelines vary by field, but common benchmarks classify ICC values as poor (<0.5), moderate (0.5–0.75),

Limitations of the ICC include sensitivity to the chosen model, the number of raters, and the range

(for
example
one-way
random
effects,
two-way
random
effects,
or
two-way
mixed
effects).
The
ICC
is
typically
estimated
from
analysis
of
variance
components
and
reflects
the
proportion
of
total
variance
that
is
attributable
to
between-group
differences.
The
coefficient
generally
ranges
from
0
to
1,
with
higher
values
indicating
greater
similarity
within
groups.
In
some
models,
negative
ICC
estimates
can
occur,
often
indicating
model
misfit
or
greater
within-group
variability
than
between-group
variability;
such
values
are
usually
interpreted
as
zero
reliability.
good
(0.75–0.9),
and
excellent
(>0.9)
reliability,
particularly
for
ratings
and
measurements
intended
to
be
interchangeable.
Applications
include
psychometrics,
education
(consistency
of
test
scores
across
raters),
medicine
(imaging
or
pathology
ratings),
and
any
research
with
clustered
or
hierarchical
data.
of
scores
in
the
sample.
Reporting
should
include
the
model
used
and
confidence
intervals.
See
also
reliability,
interrater
reliability,
ANOVA,
and
variance
components.