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      Use and Misuse of the Likert Item Responses and Other Ordinal Measures

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          Abstract

          Likert, Likert-type, and ordinal-scale responses are very popular psychometric item scoring schemes for attempting to quantify people’s opinions, interests, or perceived efficacy of an intervention and are used extensively in Physical Education and Exercise Science research. However, these numbered measures are generally considered ordinal and violate some statistical assumptions needed to evaluate them as normally distributed, parametric data. This is an issue because parametric statistics are generally perceived as being more statistically powerful than non-parametric statistics. To avoid possible misinterpretation, care must be taken in analyzing these types of data. The use of visual analog scales may be equally efficacious and provide somewhat better data for analysis with parametric statistics.

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          A technique for the measturement of attittudes

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            Do Data Characteristics Change According to the Number of Scale Points Used? An Experiment Using 5-Point, 7-Point and 10-Point Scales

            John Dawes (2018)
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              Interval-level measurement with visual analogue scales in Internet-based research: VAS Generator.

              The present article describes VAS Generator (www.vasgenerator.net), a free Web service for creating a wide range of visual analogue scales that can be used as measurement devices in Web surveys and Web experimentation, as well as for local computerized assessment. A step-by-step example for creating and implementing a visual analogue scale with visual feedback is given. VAS Generator and the scales it generates work independently of platforms and use the underlying languages HTML and JavaScript. Results from a validation study with 355 participants are reported and show that the scales generated with VAS Generator approximate an interval-scale level. In light of previous research on visual analogue versus categorical (e.g., radio button) scales in Internet-based research, we conclude that categorical scales only reach ordinal-scale level, and thus visual analogue scales are to be preferred whenever possible.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Int J Exerc Sci
                Int J Exerc Sci
                International Journal of Exercise Science
                Berkeley Electronic Press
                1939-795X
                2015
                1 July 2015
                : 8
                : 3
                : 297-302
                Affiliations
                [1 ]The University of Alabama, Department of Kinesiology, Exercise Physiology Laboratory, Tuscaloosa, AL, USA
                [2 ]Auburn University at Montgomery, Department of Kinesiology, Human Performance Lab, Montgomery, AL, USA
                Author notes
                [‡]

                Denotes professional author

                [†]

                Denotes graduate student author

                Article
                ijes_08_03_297
                4833473
                27182418
                d60fb2b6-0c1d-4004-9808-dfff55418558
                Copyright @ 2015
                History
                Categories
                Technical Note

                visual analog scale,subjective,statistical analysis,exercise science

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