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Measurement of Variables. What are the Four Types of Psychological Measures? What are the Four Measurement Scales? What are Discrete and Continuous Variables?. Types of Measures. Self-Report Tests Behavioral Measures Physical Measures. Measurement Scales.
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Measurement of Variables • What are the Four Types of Psychological Measures? • What are the Four Measurement Scales? • What are Discrete and Continuous Variables?
Types of Measures • Self-Report • Tests • Behavioral Measures • Physical Measures
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.
Nominal Scale • Numbers classify into groups. • Math, other than counting, is not meaningful. • EXAMPLES: • gender • hair color
Ordinal Scale • Numbers are rank orders. • Most mathematical operations are not meaningful. • EXAMPLES: • order of finish in a race • class rank
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
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
The Same Temperatures on a Ratio Scale (Rankine = F + 459.6)
The Same Temperatures on a Ratio Scale (Kelvin = C + 273.15)
Discrete vs. ContinuousVariables • discrete: separate, whole number values • EXAMPLE: number of pets • continuous: continuum including fractional values • EXAMPLE: height
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