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Using latent variable models to make gaming-the-system detection robust to context variations.

Authors :
Huang, Yun
Dang, Steven
Elizabeth Richey, J.
Chhabra, Pallavi
Thomas, Danielle R.
Asher, Michael W.
Lobczowski, Nikki G.
McLaughlin, Elizabeth A.
Harackiewicz, Judith M.
Aleven, Vincent
Koedinger, Kenneth R.
Source :
User Modeling & User-Adapted Interaction; Nov2023, Vol. 33 Issue 5, p1211-1257, 47p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Gaming the system, a behavior in which learners exploit a system's properties to make progress while avoiding learning, has frequently been shown to be associated with lower learning. However, when we applied a previously validated gaming detector across conditions in experiments with an algebra tutor, the detected gaming was not associated with reduced learning, challenging its validity in our study context. Our exploratory data analysis suggested that varying contextual factors across and within conditions contributed to this lack of association. We present a new approach, latent variable-based gaming detection (LV-GD), that controls for contextual factors and more robustly estimates student-level latent gaming tendencies. In LV-GD, a student is estimated as having a high gaming tendency if the student is detected to game more than the expected level of the population given the context. LV-GD applies a statistical model on top of an existing action-level gaming detector developed based on a typical human labeling process, without additional labeling effort. Across three datasets, we find that LV-GD consistently outperformed the original detector in validity measured by association between gaming and learning as well as reliability. LV-GD also afforded high practical utility: it more accurately revealed intervention effects on gaming, revealed a correlation between gaming and perceived competence in math and helped understand productive detected gaming behaviors. Our approach is not only useful for others wanting a cost-effective way to adapt a gaming detector to their context but is also generally applicable in creating robust behavioral measures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09241868
Volume :
33
Issue :
5
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
User Modeling & User-Adapted Interaction
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
172895012
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11257-023-09362-1