Categorizing Data
Learning Outcomes
- Determine whether a value calculated from a group is a statistic or a parameter
- Identify the difference between a census and a sample
- Identify the population of a study
- Determine whether a measurement is categorical or qualitative
Quantitative or Categorical
Once we have gathered data, we might wish to classify it. Roughly speaking, data can be classified as categorical data or quantitative data.Quantitative and categorical data
example
We might conduct a survey to determine the name of the favorite movie that each person in a math class saw in a movie theater. When we conduct such a survey, the responses would look like: Finding Nemo, The Hulk, or Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines. We might count the number of people who give each answer, but the answers themselves do not have any numerical values: we cannot perform computations with an answer like "Finding Nemo." Is this categorical or quantitative data?Answer: This would be categorical data.
Example
A survey could ask the number of movies you have seen in a movie theater in the past 12 months (0, 1, 2, 3, 4, . . .). Is this categorical or quantitative data?Answer: This would be quantitative data.Other examples of quantitative data would be the running time of the movie you saw most recently (104 minutes, 137 minutes, 104 minutes, . . .) or the amount of money you paid for a movie ticket the last time you went to a movie theater ($5.50, $7.75, $9, . . .).
example
Suppose we gather respondents' ZIP codes in a survey to track their geographical location. Is this categorical or quantitative?Answer: ZIP codes are numbers, but we can't do any meaningful mathematical calculations with them (it doesn't make sense to say that 98036 is "twice" 49018 — that's like saying that Lynnwood, WA is "twice" Battle Creek, MI, which doesn't make sense at all), so ZIP codes are really categorical data.
Example
A survey about the movie you most recently attended includes the question "How would you rate the movie you just saw?" with these possible answers: 1 - it was awful 2 - it was just OK 3 - I liked it 4 - it was great 5 - best movie ever! Is this categorical or quantitative?Answer:
Try It
Classify each measurement as categorical or quantitative.- Eye color of a group of people
- Daily high temperature of a city over several weeks
- Annual income
Answer: 1. Categorical. 2. Quantitative 3. Quantitative
Licenses & Attributions
CC licensed content, Original
- Screenshot: Portland Zip Codes. Provided by: Lumen Learning License: CC BY: Attribution.
- Revision and Adaptation. Provided by: Lumen Learning License: CC BY: Attribution.
CC licensed content, Shared previously
- Categorizing Data. Authored by: David Lippman. Located at: http://www.opentextbookstore.com/mathinsociety/. License: CC BY-SA: Attribution-ShareAlike.
- Some cheerful data. Authored by: dirkcuys. Located at: https://www.flickr.com/photos/79237959@N02/12210424505/. License: CC BY-SA: Attribution-ShareAlike.
- Qualitative and Quantitative. Authored by: OCLPhase2's channel. License: CC BY: Attribution.
- Question ID 6743. Authored by: Lippman, David. License: CC BY: Attribution. License terms: IMathAS Community LicenseCC-BY + GPL.