Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Measurement of Variables What are the Four Types of Psychological Measures? What are the Four Types of Psychological Measures? What are the Four Measurement Scales? What are Discrete and Continuous Variables?
2
Types of Measures Self-Report Tests Behavioral Measures Physical Measures
3
Measurement Scales The measurement scale tells you what assumptions you can make about a score. Many statistics require a certain measurement scale. The measurement scale is a property of the data, not a decision made by the researcher.
4
Nominal Scale Numbers classify into groups. Math, other than counting, is not meaningful. EXAMPLES: – gender – hair color
5
Ordinal Scale Numbers are rank orders. Most mathematical operations are not meaningful. EXAMPLES: – order of finish in a race – class rank
6
Interval Scale Numbers represent amounts, with equal intervals between numbers. Math, other than ratio comparisons, is meaningful. EXAMPLES: – score on intelligence test – temperature in Celsius
7
Ratio Scale Numbers represent amounts, with equal intervals and an absolute zero absolute zero: zero represents complete absence Math, including ratios, is meaningful. EXAMPLES: – number of seconds to finish – temperature in Kelvin
8
Why You Can’t do Ratios on an Interval Scale
9
The Same Temperatures on Another Interval Scale
10
The Same Temperatures with Absolute Zero Shown
11
The Same Temperatures on a Ratio Scale (Rankine = F + 459.6)
12
The Same Temperatures on a Ratio Scale (Kelvin = C + 273.15)
13
Discrete vs. Continuous Variables discrete: separate, whole number values – EXAMPLE: number of pets continuous: continuum including fractional values – EXAMPLE: height
14
Real Limits A score on a continuous variable is really an interval. The real limits are half a unit down and half a unit up from the measured score. – measured score = 65 inches – real limits: 64.5-65.5 inches
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com Inc.
All rights reserved.