Dear SPSS Lister:
There is a Database which contain the following information from 1949 to 2006 for the Wild Animal Management Area in India: 1. Success of hunt; 2. Sex and age of kill; 3. Number of adults (by sex) seen; 4. Number of calves seen; 5. Number of days hunted. Could you tell me how this info can be used to help monitor wild animal populations in The Wild Animal Management Area by using SPSS? Thanks! |
Chen
SPSS is just a statistical package. It deals with procedures, not substance. The substance of your analysis, i.e. the goal and scope of your research, is to be decided by you, based on your expertise and the nature of your data. Whatever you may want to do statistically to achieve to goals of your research, we could probably tell you how SPSS could do it for you. By the way, at that point, besides explaining the purpose and design of your research, you must also tell us in more detail what is the structure of the data. Apparently, each "case" or "record" in your database corresponds to one "hunt", i.e. one episode in which a party of people went out and tried to see or hunt animals in the Wild Animal Management Area, with various results. You do not explain whether all data correspond to the same species or they may correspond to different species of animal. You fail also to explain whether all hunts were equal in size or duration, or they were different (one person going out on a small area and for one afternoon in the wild is different from twenty people going out on a wider area and for an entire week, I suspect), or this information is just missing in the database. Sorry, but unless you first decide what you want to do, and explain better the nature of the data, we can do very little to help you. Hector -----Mensaje original----- De: SPSSX(r) Discussion [mailto:[hidden email]] En nombre de SPSS Chen Enviado el: 11 November 2006 16:30 Para: [hidden email] Asunto: Data Analysis: Wild Animal Population Dear SPSS Lister: There is a Database which contain the following information from 1949 to 2006 for the Wild Animal Management Area in India: 1. Success of hunt; 2. Sex and age of kill; 3. Number of adults (by sex) seen; 4. Number of calves seen; 5. Number of days hunted. Could you tell me how this info can be used to help monitor wild animal populations in The Wild Animal Management Area by using SPSS? Thanks! |
In reply to this post by Hans Chen
Dear Colleague,
I agree with Hector. But to answer your question, under the right conditions you can use SPSS to test hypotheses. Hypotheses are suppositions about your data in terms of what variables predict what other variables. You have told us about five variables that you have. With this data you could test hypotheses such as these: H1: Number of days hunted predicts Success of hunt (I am assuming Success means number of animals killed) H2: Number of days hunted predicts Number of adults seen H3: Number of days hunted predicts number of calves seen You could use regression analysis these tests. While these hypotheses may not going answer your wildlife question, they may help you learn about the situation. Then, for example, to manage one wild animal population (e.g. water buffalo) you could graph the Success of hunt, Number of adults seen and Number of calves seen over time to determine if the numbers are going up or down. I hope that this gives you some ideas about how you could apply your data to the problem using SPSS. Actually doing these tests takes a lot of knowledge about research methods and SPSS. To answer your question properly you probably need to do the equivalent of a PhD. I hope this helps and good luck with your research! Cheers, Roxanne ________________________________ From: SPSSX(r) Discussion on behalf of SPSS Chenyou c Sent: Sat 11/11/2006 7:29 AM To: [hidden email] Subject: Data Analysis: Wild Animal Population Dear SPSS Lister: There is a Database which contain the following information from 1949 to 2006 for the Wild Animal Management Area in India: 1. Success of hunt; 2. Sex and age of kill; 3. Number of adults (by sex) seen; 4. Number of calves seen; 5. Number of days hunted. Could you tell me how this info can be used to help monitor wild animal populations in The Wild Animal Management Area by using SPSS? Thanks! |
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