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Social Statistics and Data Analysis-Lecture 16-Sociology-Dr David Hall, Lecture notes of Social Statistics and Data Analysis

Nominal Measures, Phi-Coefficient, Contingency Coefficient, Ordinal Measures, Spearman, Interpreting Spearman, Goodman’s and Kruskal’s Gamma, Gamma coefficient, Social Statistics and Data Analysis, Lecture Slides, Sociology, Dr David Hall, Nipissing University, Canada

Typology: Lecture notes

2011/2012

Uploaded on 01/26/2012

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NOMINAL MEASURES OF
ASSOCIATION
Statistics clarify the causal context of social
phenomena. One precondition for an
X Y
causal
relationship is that 2 variables be empirically
associated. Measures of association determine if 2
variables are empirically associated.
For nominal level variable, we can use
measures of
association that are extensions of chi-square
. These
chi-square or “delta” based measures of association
are
:
Phi-coeffient, Cramer’s V, and the Contingency
Coefficient.
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NOMINAL MEASURES OF

ASSOCIATION

► Statistics clarify the causal context of social

phenomena. One precondition for an X  Y causal

relationship is that 2 variables be empirically associated. Measures of association determine if 2 variables are empirically associated.

► For nominal level variable, we can use measures of

association that are extensions of chi-square. These

chi-square or “delta” based measures of association

are: Phi-coeffient, Cramer’s V, and the Contingency

Coefficient.

ORDINAL MEASURES OF ASSOCIATION

►For variables measured at the ORDINAL level,

we can use two alternative measures of association: Spearman’s rank -order correlation coefficient (Spearman’s r), and Goodman’s and Kruskal’s Gamma coefficient (Gamma).

►When ordinal level variables have been ranked

on a given characteristic use Spearman’s r

Interpreting Spearman’s r

► Spearman’s r shows the level of

agreement or consistency in the rankings

of two variables X and Y.

►If X and Y are ranked identically, then

Spearman’s r will be 1.0. A positive sign

indicates that as rankings increase in X

they increase in Y.

►If X and Y are ranked oppositely, then

Spearman’s r will take a value of -1.0. A

negative sign would indicate that as

rankings increase in X, they decrease in

Y.

Goodman’s and Kruskal’s

Gamma

►Variables measured in ordinal

categories such as low / medium/ high, produce a large number of tied ranks. In such cases, when two ordinal variables are crosstabulated (e.g., in a 2 x 2; 2 x 3; 3 x 4 table), the Gamma coefficient (G) is the appropriate measure of association.