Thanks for the response.
I am not sure about "not severely discrepant from ordinal level”.
Regarding intent, the attributes are not intended to measure a single concept. The model for reduction was mixed. We did a content review and focused on reducing redundancy. No further reduction is required. We just want to quantify the impact.
Mark
From: Art Kendall [mailto:[hidden email]]
Sent: Wednesday, December 14, 2011 2:35 PM
To: Mark Andrews ([hidden email])
Cc: [hidden email]
Subject: Re: [SPSSX-L] Comparing 2 groups of variables
You say you have attribute variables but say you have an 11 point response scale.
Are your values in the response scale "not severely discrepant from ordinal level"?
Is this a summative scale where the 11 variables are repeated measure of some construct? E.g., an attitude?
Is the idea to have just 10 for reasons of respondent burden?
If these are correct assumptions see RELIABILITY. just to be safe drop any item whose removal would increase reliability.
keep doing that until the removal of no item increase reliability.
Then drop the item for which its removal would make the least decrement in reliability.
keep doing that until you are down to 10 or you may have to keep more than 10 if removal of an item makes a serious decrement in reliability.
HTH
Art Kendall
Social Research Consultants
On 12/14/2011 2:14 PM, Mark W. Andrews wrote:
I have 17 attributes (11 point scale). We want to reduce it to 10 attributes. Someone asked how much we are losing by reducing the number of attributes. I was thinking that the math would be similar to the accumulated variance explained figures you get from a factor analysis. Instead of factors, however, I would be looking at attribute variables.
From: Poes, Matthew Joseph [[hidden email]]
Sent: Wednesday, December 14, 2011 2:05 PM
To: Mark Andrews ([hidden email]); [hidden email]
Subject: RE: Comparing 2 groups of variables
Can you give more detail? Are you saying that you have a group of, say, 5 predictor variables, and you want to know what the association is of those 5 variables on an outcome variable Y, and then what total variance is explained by 3 of the 5 variables, while still accounting for the common variance in the other two variables? Or are you asking what amount of variance in a group of 5 variables is explained by a separate group of 3 variables? Or, are you asking this in more scalar terms, and wanting to know which variables account for the greatest amount of variance within the collective latent variable that they collectively make up. In the latter, we have the same 5 variables, combined and they explain mood stability, and you want to know what amount of the total explainability 3 of the 5 variables have? Thanks.
Matthew J Poes
Research Data Specialist
Center for Prevention Research and Development
University of Illinois
From: SPSSX(r) Discussion [[hidden email]] On Behalf Of Mark W. Andrews
Sent: Wednesday, December 14, 2011 12:49 PM
To: [hidden email]
Subject: Comparing 2 groups of variables
I am trying figure out how much of the variance within a group of variables is explained by the a subgroup of variables. Can anyone point me in the right direction?
Mark W. Andrews
Senior Study Director
Synovate
7600 Leesburg Pike, East Building, Suite 110
Falls Church, VA 22043
Phone 703-663-7237
FAX 703-790-9181
Email [hidden email]
Web www.synovate.com
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