Hi, thanks for the great info. I'd like to ask you if you can please suggest me some open source softwares for big data cleaning that don't require coding. I have studied quite a few machine learning topics by myself, and Jasp is really good when it comes to modeling. Data cleaning can be a big issue for me though, since I don't have coding background. Thanks in advance.
I do not know the software that's out there for this type of data cleaning. I use Excel formulas to clean my data, but I don't think the amount of cases I have matches yours
Thanks for this review. I understand that JASP can load data directly from databases like IBM DB2, Oracle, MySQL, MariaDB, Postgres, SQLite (via OBDC). R can also link directly to SQL via RSQLite. As of date of this comment, it does not seem to be the case for Jamovi. This can be a deal breaker for example if the data set has tens of millions of records and/or if the instructional goal is to include SQL skills along with statistical analysis skills development. For small data sets and if handling SQL databases is not a consideration, Jamovi may be a good option per your review.
Thanks for the added context/comparison! I wasn’t aware of the database functionality. I haven’t come across colleagues who use that, but I can see it being a problem.
Thanks a lot for the great videos. One of the best channels on RUclips.
Today (17/05/2023) I tried both but I feel JASP has more functionality than Jamovi
One more problem about jasp. It doesn't have survival analysis.
Hi, thanks for the great info. I'd like to ask you if you can please suggest me some open source softwares for big data cleaning that don't require coding. I have studied quite a few machine learning topics by myself, and Jasp is really good when it comes to modeling. Data cleaning can be a big issue for me though, since I don't have coding background. Thanks in advance.
I do not know the software that's out there for this type of data cleaning. I use Excel formulas to clean my data, but I don't think the amount of cases I have matches yours
@@AlexanderSwan thank you so much for your answer. Yeah definitely excel can always come handy, although I was also looking for something else.
I started using jamovi because of this channel. Much better than spss and a lot easier.
Hi do you know how to perform meta-analysis of dependent groups??
I do not, sorry
Thanks for this review. I understand that JASP can load data directly from databases like IBM DB2, Oracle, MySQL, MariaDB, Postgres, SQLite (via OBDC). R can also link directly to SQL via RSQLite. As of date of this comment, it does not seem to be the case for Jamovi. This can be a deal breaker for example if the data set has tens of millions of records and/or if the instructional goal is to include SQL skills along with statistical analysis skills development. For small data sets and if handling SQL databases is not a consideration, Jamovi may be a good option per your review.
Thanks for the added context/comparison! I wasn’t aware of the database functionality. I haven’t come across colleagues who use that, but I can see it being a problem.
Does jamovi have a machine learning module?
At the time of this reply, the answer is unfortunately no. R is your best bet right now.