1.2: data classification
ordinal level of measurement
- qualitative data - data can be arranged in order (ranked) - precise differences between ranks do not exist - eg: letter grades, movie ratings, survey responses
nominal level of measurement
- qualitative data only - categorized using names, labels, qualities - no order or rank - no mathematical computations can be made - eg: gender, ethnicity, SSN, school ID
ratio level of measurement
- quantitative data - zero entry is an inherent zero (implies none) - there is a starting point to the data - ratio of two data values can be informed - eg: height, weight, BMI, speed
interval level of measurement
- quantitative data - data can be ordered - differences between data entries are meaningful - zero represents a position on a scale - eg: temperature, years, evolution
list the levels of measure
1. nominal 2. ordinal 3. interval 4. ratio
what are the two types of quantitative variables?
continuous and discrete data
continuous data
quantitative data that can take on any value in a given interval and are usually measurements
discrete data
quantitative data that can take on only particular values and are usually counts
quantitative variables
variables that can be counted or measured
qualitative variables
variables that have distinct categories according to some characteristic or attribute