@@omnibrain8 in fact, phi indicates how intense is the association of the categorical variables. the bigger the phi, the more intensive the association. you can check about the phi's strength in various tables on the internet or in statistical books
can i perform a chi square test between a nominal and an ordinal variable (likert)? also, what happens when we have 2 nominal questions in a questionnaire, and one of them is multiple choice?
Thank you so much. You may have got me back on track with the first year of my OU degree
I absolutely love the way you explained these concepts. It was so easy to understand!
Thank you! This was the most clear tutorial and it helped me with my assignment
Thank you sir. Now I'm confident about submitting my assignment tomorrow ❤❤
Thank you for sharing. It's short but clear for us no statisticians. I wish you included percentages for further cells description.
Excellent tutorial 🎉 👍 👌
Very explanatory. Thank you so much.
clear and crisp explanation - Thanks a lot for the 'help' :)
Hi! Evening before my final and this solved an important question I had. Thanks!
Can you please tell me the version of this SPSS?
You have a gift! Thank you for explaining clearly (Y)
Fantastic and clear presentation! Thank you so much!
Wish you would say why phi is high or low rather than expecting people to have seen your other videos.
thank you for helping me!
We conclude that there is no association between the two categorical data because the Phi value is very small?
no. the p-value here is
@@tg5175 thank you
@@tg5175 thank you
@@omnibrain8 in fact, phi indicates how intense is the association of the categorical variables. the bigger the phi, the more intensive the association. you can check about the phi's strength in various tables on the internet or in statistical books
@@tg5175 I see and please what should be done if there are some cells than 0.05?
can i perform a chi square test between a nominal and an ordinal variable (likert)? also, what happens when we have 2 nominal questions in a questionnaire, and one of them is multiple choice?
Thank you! One question: Is it possible to see how the variables are associated? So if religion increases or decreases whatever?
Is that you, Dolapo?
Thank You! :)
How do you see what percent of each christian and athesist is? Eg christans are x% more likely to answer yes?
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Interesting
Hard to hear him