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Dear members
Sorry I forgot to include a sample of my data file. My data file has the following variable columns LAC Freqlac No satis No dissat No neutral No don't know Total count % sat % dissatisfy % neutral % don?t know Strawberry 83 26.93 7.44 6 .76 3.29 44.41 60.63 16.74 15.22 7.41 reagrds thara I would be really thankful if any member could help me solve this problem of calculating % margin of error. From a survey conducted by an independent organisation for a question on satisfaction with services provided by us: I have a 4 scale response as 1) dis-satisfied 2) Satisfied 3) Neither 9) Don?t Know Using the aggregate function in SPSS I have calculated the number of counts and percentage for each of the above. I also have the frequency of responses by each Local command area as a variable in my data file. At 95% confidence level with an additional factor of 1.25 I have to calculate the margin of error. My colleague has given me the following syntax to calculate the percentage margin of error in excel file v5 =CONCATENATE(ROUND(100*1.25*1.96*SQRT((U5*(1-U5)/T5)),1),"%") Where u5 is the percentage satisfied with services and t5 is the total sample size for each LAC (obtained as sum of frequencies). Lower limit u5-v5 Upper limit u5+v5 I tried to do the same in SPSS by using the two variables percentsatisfy and freqlac in my SPSS file with syntax as: COMPUTE Margine=(100*1.25*1.96* SQRT(percentsatisfy*1-percentsatisfy))/freqlac. EXECUTE. The syntax as such, seems to be working but I get 0 values in the variable column. Thanks Regards thara This message and any attachment is confidential and may be privileged or otherwise protected from disclosure. If you have received it by mistake, please let us know by reply and then delete it from your system; you should not copy the message or disclose its contents to anyone. |
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what does "Strawberry" mean?
On 6/20/07, Thara Vardhan <[hidden email]> wrote: > > Dear members > > Sorry I forgot to include a sample of my data file. My data file has the > following variable columns > > > LAC Freqlac No satis No dissat No neutral No don't > know Total count % sat % dissatisfy % neutral % don?t know > Strawberry 83 26.93 7.44 6 .76 3.29 > 44.41 60.63 16.74 15.22 7.41 > > reagrds > thara > > I would be really thankful if any member could help me solve this problem > of calculating % margin of error. > > From a survey conducted by an independent organisation for a question on > satisfaction with services provided by us: > > I have a 4 scale response as 1) dis-satisfied 2) Satisfied 3) Neither 9) > Don?t Know > > Using the aggregate function in SPSS I have calculated the number of > counts and percentage for each of the above. > > I also have the frequency of responses by each Local command area as a > variable in my data file. > > At 95% confidence level with an additional factor of 1.25 I have to > calculate the margin of error. > > My colleague has given me the following syntax to calculate the percentage > margin of error in excel file > > v5 =CONCATENATE(ROUND(100*1.25*1.96*SQRT((U5*(1-U5)/T5)),1),"%") > > Where u5 is the percentage satisfied with services and t5 is the total > sample size for each LAC (obtained as sum of frequencies). > > Lower limit u5-v5 > > Upper limit u5+v5 > > I tried to do the same in SPSS by using the two variables percentsatisfy > and freqlac in my SPSS file with syntax as: > > COMPUTE Margine=(100*1.25*1.96* > SQRT(percentsatisfy*1-percentsatisfy))/freqlac. > EXECUTE. > > The syntax as such, seems to be working but I get 0 values in the variable > column. > > Thanks > Regards > thara > > > > This message and any attachment is confidential and may > be privileged or otherwise protected from disclosure. If you > have received it by mistake, please let us know by reply > and then delete it from your system; you should not copy > the message or disclose its contents to anyone. > |
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Hi
I see a very simple error in your formula (a missing pair of parenthesis) >> I tried to do the same in SPSS by using the two variables percentsatisfy >> and freqlac in my SPSS file with syntax as: >> >> COMPUTE Margine=(100*1.25*1.96* >> SQRT(percentsatisfy*1-percentsatisfy))/freqlac. >> EXECUTE. Try this one: COMPUTE Margine=(100*1.25*1.96*SQRT(percentsatisfy*(1-percentsatisfy)))/freqlac. Notice the extra parentheses wrapping "1-percentsstisfy". Another question: are percentsatisfy values really percentages (ranging from 0 to 100%? If so, then your formula should be ...SQRT(percentsatisfy*(100-percentsatisfy).... >> The syntax as such, seems to be working but I get 0 values in the >> variable >> column. It is quite logical that it happened so, since your formula computes the square root of a quantity, multiplied by 1, and then minus itself! HTH, Marta Garcia-Granero NOTICE FOR EVERYONE INTERESTED: my old e-mail address ([hidden email]) is officially defunct. I can only be reached at the one I'm using here with the SPSS list ([hidden email]). Anyway, any question concerning statistics and/or SPSS should be addressed to the list, never privately to me (unless I ask for some test data being sent to me). Thanks. |
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