1.4:

Nominal Level of Measurement

JoVE 핵심
통계학
JoVE 비디오를 활용하시려면 도서관을 통한 기관 구독이 필요합니다.  전체 비디오를 보시려면 로그인하거나 무료 트라이얼을 시작하세요.
JoVE 핵심 통계학
Nominal Level of Measurement

20,031 Views

00:56 min

April 30, 2023

The way a set of data is measured is called its level of measurement. Correct statistical procedures depend on a researcher being familiar with levels of measurement. Not every statistical operation can be used with every set of data. For analysis, data are classified into four levels of measurement—nominal, ordinal, interval, and ratio.

The data that cannot be measured but can be grouped into categories fall under the nominal level of measurement. Data that is measured using a nominal scale is qualitative (categorical). Categories, colors, names, labels, favorite foods, and ‘yes’ or ‘no’ responses are examples of nominal level data. For example, one can group restaurants based on whether they serve vegetarian, non-vegetarian, or vegan diets. But one cannot measure how much healthier the diet of each restaurant is or how much more vegetarian it is than other restaurants.

This text is adapted from Openstax, Introductory Statistics, Section 1.3 Frequency, Frequency Tables, and Levels of Measurement