measurement {memisc} | R Documentation |
Levels of Measurement of Survey Items
Description
The measurement level of a "item"
object, which is one of "nominal", "ordinal", "interval", "ratio",
determines what happens to it, if it or the data.set
containing it is coerced into a data.frame
.
If the level of measurement level is "nominal", the it will be
converted into an (unordered) factor, if the level of measurement is "ordinal",
the item will be converted into an ordered vector. If the measurement
is "interval" or "ratio", the item will be converted into a numerical vector.
Usage
## S4 method for signature 'item'
measurement(x)
## S4 replacement method for signature 'item'
measurement(x) <- value
## S4 method for signature 'data.set'
measurement(x)
## S4 replacement method for signature 'data.set'
measurement(x) <- value
is.nominal(x)
is.ordinal(x)
is.interval(x)
is.ratio(x)
as.nominal(x)
as.ordinal(x)
as.interval(x)
as.ratio(x)
set_measurement(x,...)
Arguments
x |
an object, usually of class |
value |
for the |
... |
vectors of variable names, either symbols or character strings, tagged with the intended measurement level. |
Value
The item
method of measurement(x)
returns a character
string, the data.set
method returns a named character vector,
where the name of each element is a variable name and each.
as.nominal
, as.ordinal
, as.interval
, as.ratio
return an item with the requested level of measurement setting.
is.nominal
, is.ordinal
, is.interval
, is.ratio
return a logical value.
References
Stevens, Stanley S. 1946. "On the theory of scales of measurement." Science 103: 677-680.
See Also
Examples
vote <- sample(c(1,2,3,8,9),size=30,replace=TRUE)
labels(vote) <- c(Conservatives = 1,
Labour = 2,
"Liberal Democrats" = 3,
"Don't know" = 8,
"Answer refused" = 9
)
missing.values(vote) <- c(8,9)
as.data.frame(vote)[[1]]
measurement(vote) <- "interval"
as.data.frame(vote)[[1]]
vote <- as.nominal(vote)
as.data.frame(vote)[[1]]
group <- sample(c(1,2),size=30,replace=TRUE)
labels(group) <- c(A=1,B=2)
DataS <- data.set(group,vote)
measurement(DataS)
measurement(DataS) <- list(interval=c("group","vote"))
head(as.data.frame(DataS))
DataS <- set_measurement(DataS,
nominal=c(group,vote))
head(as.data.frame(DataS))