Measurement & Scaling Techniques
Measurement & Scaling Techniques
Measurement & Scaling Techniques
Techniques
Research Methodology
Questions
1. Short note on
– Scaling Techniques
– Tests of sound measurement
– Validity of measurements
– Measurement techniques
2. Bring out the importance & utility of Rating & Scaling
techniques in quantifying data with examples
3. What is measurement in research? Explain tests of
sound measurements.
Interval Performance
Rating on a 8.2 9.1 9.6
0 to 10 Scale
15.2 14.1 13.4
Ratio Time to
Finish, in
Measurement Scale
Nominal (name and count)
• Numbers are used to label only, no
numerical sanctity
Male -> 1 & female -> 2 or female ->1 &
male -> 2 (does not make any difference)
• Count is only statistics, Chi-square test can
be used
• Mean, Std deviation can not be used
Measurement should be
Valid
Reliable
Practicable
Tests of Validity
• The extent to which an instrument
measures what it supposed to measure
• The extent to which differences found with
a measuring instrument reflect true
difference among those being measured
Tests of Practicability
• Economy
• Convenience
• interpretability
What is Scaling?
• Scaling describes the procedure of
assigning numbers to various degrees of
opinion, attitude and other concepts
• Scaling provides a mechanism for
measuring abstract concepts
Comparative Noncomparative
Scales Scales
Semantic Stapel
Likert
Differential
Important Scaling Techniques
Comparative scales involve the direct
comparison of stimulus objects.
Comparative scale data must be interpreted
in relative terms and have only ordinal or
rank order properties.
In noncomparative scales, each object is
scaled independently of the others in the
stimulus set. The resulting data are
generally assumed to be interval or ratio
scaled.
Sep 2009 Measurement & Scaling Techniques
Comparative Scaling Techniques
Paired Comparison Scaling
• A respondent is presented with two objects and asked to
select one according to some criterion.
• The data obtained are ordinal in nature.
• Paired comparison scaling is the most widely used
comparative scaling technique.
• With n brands, [n(n - 1) /2] paired comparisons are
required
• Under the assumption of transitivity, it is possible to
convert paired comparison data to a rank order.
Obtaining Shampoo Preferences
Figure 8.3 Using Paired Comparisons
Instructions: We are going to present you with ten pairs of
shampoo brands. For each pair, please indicate which one of the
two brands of shampoo you would prefer for personal use.
Jhirmack Finesse Vidal Head & Pert
Sassoon Shoulders
Recording
Jhirmack
Form: 0 0 1 0
Finesse 1a 0 1 0
Vidal Sassoon 1 1 1 1
Head & Shoulders 0 0 0 0
Pert 1 1 0 1
Number of Times 3 2 0 4 1
Preferredb
a
A 1 in a particular box means that the brand in that column was preferred
over the brand in the corresponding row. A 0 means that the row brand was
preferred over the column brand. bThe number of times a brand was preferred
is obtained by summing the 1s in each column.
Comparative Scaling Techniques
Rank Order Scaling
• Respondents are presented with several objects
simultaneously and asked to order or rank them
according to some criterion.
• It is possible that the respondent may dislike the brand
ranked 1 in an absolute sense.
• Furthermore, rank order scaling also results in ordinal
data.
• Only (n - 1) scaling decisions need be made in rank
order scaling.
Preference for Toothpaste Brands
Figure 8.4 Using Rank Order Scaling
Instructions: Rank the various brands of toothpaste in order
of preference. Begin by picking out the one brand that you like
most and assign it a number 1. Then find the second most
preferred brand and assign it a number 2. Continue this
procedure until you have ranked all the brands of toothpaste
in order of preference. The least preferred brand should be
assigned a rank of 10.
No two brands should receive the same rank number.
The criterion of preference is entirely up to you. There is no
right or wrong answer. Just try to be consistent.
Preference for Toothpaste Brands
Using Rank Order Scaling
Figure 8.4 cont.
Form
Brand Rank Order
1. Crest _________
2. Colgate _________
3. Aim _________
4. Gleem _________
5. Macleans _________
Instructions
On the next slide, there are eight attributes of
bathing soaps. Please allocate 100 points among
the attributes so that your allocation reflects the
relative importance you attach to each attribute.
The more points an attribute receives, the more
important the attribute is. If an attribute is not at
all important, assign it zero points. If an attribute is
twice as important as some other attribute, it
should receive twice as many points.
Importance of Bathing Soap Attributes
Using
Figure 8.5 cont.
a Constant Sum Scale
Form
Average Responses of Three Segments
Attribute
Segment I Segment
8 II Segment
2 III 4
1. Mildness 2 4 17
2. Lather 3 9 7
3. Shrinkage 53 17 9
4. Price 9 0 19
5. Fragrance 7 5 9
6. Packaging 5 3 20
13 60 15
7. Moisturizing
Sum 100 100 100
8. Cleaning Power