Karl Schweizer
New Jersey Institute of Technology
Andreas Gold
University Hospital Heidelberg
Neele Reiß
Institut für Psychologische Psychotherapie
Sabine Rohrmann
University of Zurich
Katharina Kupper
Goethe University Frankfurt
Bo Bach
Region Zealand
Beatrice Rammstedt
GESIS - Leibniz-Institute for the Social Sciences
Peter Christoffersen
American Academy of Forensic Sciences
Siegbert Reiß
Goethe University Frankfurt
Irene Warnecke
Goethe University Frankfurt
Rapid guessing is a test taking strategy recommended for increasing the probability of achieving a high score if a time limit prevents an examinee from responding to all items of a scale. The strategy requires responding quickly and without cognitively processing item details. Although there may be no omitted responses after participants' rapid guessing, an open question remains: do the data show unidimensionality, as is expected for data collected by a scale, or bi-dimensionality characterizing data collected with a time limit in testing, speeded data. To answer this question, we simulated speeded and rapid guessing data and performed confirmatory factor analysis using one-factor and two-factor models. The results revealed that speededness was detectable despite the presence of rapid guessing. However, detection may depend on the number of response options for a given set of items.