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MEASUREMENT AND 
SCALING 
Balaji.P
Measurement in Research 
 Measuring so many things in day to day life (Ex: 
Weight, height, how much love the song or movie (by 
rating)., etc. 
 Properties like weight, height measured by standard 
unit of measurement. (so confident about accuracy of 
the result of measurement) 
 Properties like how much love the music or some 
movies, intelligence, self confidence (No standard 
scale, less confident about accuracy of result of 
measurement) 
 So We can’t measure everything in same scale.
Measurement 
 Assign numbers in respect of properties of some 
objects. 
 Measurement is a process of mapping aspects 
of a domain onto other aspects of a range 
according to some rule of correspondence. 
 So we need some scales to transform some 
properties of object in to some number with 
considering some rules.
Measurement Scales 
 Nominal Scale 
 Ordinal Scale 
 Interval Scale 
 Ratio Scale
Nominal Scale 
 Nominal data are numerical in name only, 
because they do not share any of the 
properties of the numbers. 
 For ex: Sex: Male as “0” and female as “1”. Marital 
Status can be recorded as 1,2,3,4 depending on 
whether person is single, married, widowed or 
divorced. 
 There is no meaning for 4-3, 4>3, 4/2
Ordinal Scale 
 Ordinal scale places events in order, but there is 
no attempt to make the intervals of the scale 
equal in terms of some rule. 
 For ex: Students rank in class. Mohan – 10th rank and 
Krishna 40th rank. 
 There is no meaning that “Krishna is 4 times better than 
Mohan”. Difference between 11th and 10th rank may not be 
equal to difference between other two ranks. 
 Grater than or less than symbol acceptable. (first rank is 
greater than second rank)
Interval Scale 
 In the case of interval scale, the intervals are adjusted in 
terms of some rule that has been established as a basis for 
making the units equal. 
 The primary limitation of the interval scale is the lack of a true 
zero. 
 For ex: Temperature (in degrees Fahrenheit): 58,63,78,100 etc. Its 
true that 63>58, 90-70 = 108- 88 (same temperature change). But we 
can’t say 126 is twice as hot as 63 even though126/63 =2. 
 Because convert in to Centigrade scale (126 become 52) and (63 
become 17). Now 53/17= 3. This is because of number 0 of neither 
scale is indicative of the absence of whatever quantity we are trying 
to measure. 
 So no meaning of Quotient in interval scale.
Ratio Scale 
 Ratio scales have an absolute or true zero of 
measurement. 
 For ex: Zero point in centimeter of length indicate 
complete absence of Length (height, volume etc.) 
 Ratio scale is allowed to do all arithmetic operation 
which allowed for real number.
Sources of error in Measurement 
 Respondent : Little Knowledge in that area and transient 
factors like fatigue, boredom and anxiety etc. 
 Situation: Situation demands respondent not to give 
correct answer. 
 Measurer: The interviewer can distort responses by 
rewording or reordering questions. 
 Instrument: Error may arise because of the defective 
measuring instrument. (complex words, ambiguous 
meanings, poor printing, inadequate space for replies, 
response choice omissions)
Test of Measurement 
 Test of Validity 
 Test of Reliability 
 Test of Practicality
Test of Validity 
 Validity is the most critical criterion and indicates the degree 
to which an instrument measures what it is supposed to 
measure. 
 Content Validity 
 Extent to which a measuring instrument provides adequate 
coverage of the topic under study. It determined by judgmental and 
intuitive (Panel also decide sometime) 
 Criterion related validity 
 Measure of how well one variable or set of variables predicts an 
outcome based on information from other variables. It measured by 
correlation. 
 Construct validity 
 the degree to which a test measures what it claims, to be 
measuring.it determined by various statistical
Test of Reliability 
 A measuring instrument is reliable if it provides 
consistent results. 
 Reliable instrument need not be a valid instrument (For ex: 
Scale that overweight 5 kg always give reliable). 
 But Valid Instrument is always reliable. 
 Two aspects of reliability 
 Stability: Consistent results with repeated measurements of 
the same person and with the same instrument. 
 Equivalence: Considers how much error may get introduced 
by different investigators or different samples of the items 
being studied.
Test of practicality 
 Practicality can judged in terms of economy, 
convenience and interpretability. 
 Length of measuring instrument, observation time, interview 
time and data collection method are play important role in 
economic. 
 Convenience: measuring instrument should be easy to 
administer (proper layout of the measuring instrument, clear 
instruction to respondent) 
 Interpretability: Persons other than the designers of the test 
are to interpret the results . supplemented by (a) detailed 
instructions for administering the test (b) scoring keys (c) 
evidence about the reliability and (d) guides for using the test 
and for interpreting results.
Quality of Good Measurement 
 Precise 
 Unambiguous 
 Free from error 
 Reliable 
 Valid 
 Practical
Development of Measurement 
tool 
 Concept Development 
 Understand the major concept pertaining to studies. 
 Specification of concept dimension 
 It accomplish by deduction. 
 Selection and development of indicators for 
measuring each concept element. 
 Use scales or question to measure knowledge, opinion etc., 
 Formation of index 
 Combine different measurement in to single number or index.
Measurement Scales 
 All the scales are broadly classified in to two 
categories 
 Comparative Scale ( the respondent is asked to 
compare one variable against another) 
 Non Comparative Scale ( respondents need only 
evaluate a single variable)
Comparative Scale 
 Paired comparison 
 Every factor has to be paired with every other factor in 
turn. 
 Each of the objections is paired by the researcher so 
that with 5 factors, as in this example, there are 10 
pairs. 
 n(n-1)/2
Non Comparative Scale 
 Continuous rating scales: The respondents are 
asked to give a rating by placing a mark at the 
appropriate position on a continuous line.
Non Comparative Scale 
 Itemized rating scale: With an itemized scale, 
respondents are provided with a scale having numbers 
and/or brief descriptions associated with each category 
and are asked to select one of the limited number of 
categories, ordered in terms of scale position.
Non Comparative Scale 
 Semantic Scale: This type of scale makes extensive use 
of words rather than numbers. 
 Semantic Differential: The respondent is asked to choose 
where his or her position lies, on a scale between two 
bipolar adjectives. Semantic differentials can be used to 
measure opinions, attitudes and values on a 
psychometrically controlled scale.
Non Comparative Scale 
 Likert scales: A Likert scale is what is termed a 
summated instrument scale.
Guttman Scaling 
 Also known as 
 Scalogram analysis 
 Cumulative scaling 
 Purpose: 
 Establish a one-dimensional continuum 
 Perfectly predict item responses from total score 
 Seldom perfect in practice
Gutman Scaling 
 Start with a large set of items that you think all 
reflect the same construct. 
 Have many judges rate each statement with 
respect to whether it is favorable with respect 
to the construct - a yes/no rating. 
 Lay out a table.

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Measurement and scaling

  • 2. Measurement in Research  Measuring so many things in day to day life (Ex: Weight, height, how much love the song or movie (by rating)., etc.  Properties like weight, height measured by standard unit of measurement. (so confident about accuracy of the result of measurement)  Properties like how much love the music or some movies, intelligence, self confidence (No standard scale, less confident about accuracy of result of measurement)  So We can’t measure everything in same scale.
  • 3. Measurement  Assign numbers in respect of properties of some objects.  Measurement is a process of mapping aspects of a domain onto other aspects of a range according to some rule of correspondence.  So we need some scales to transform some properties of object in to some number with considering some rules.
  • 4. Measurement Scales  Nominal Scale  Ordinal Scale  Interval Scale  Ratio Scale
  • 5. Nominal Scale  Nominal data are numerical in name only, because they do not share any of the properties of the numbers.  For ex: Sex: Male as “0” and female as “1”. Marital Status can be recorded as 1,2,3,4 depending on whether person is single, married, widowed or divorced.  There is no meaning for 4-3, 4>3, 4/2
  • 6. Ordinal Scale  Ordinal scale places events in order, but there is no attempt to make the intervals of the scale equal in terms of some rule.  For ex: Students rank in class. Mohan – 10th rank and Krishna 40th rank.  There is no meaning that “Krishna is 4 times better than Mohan”. Difference between 11th and 10th rank may not be equal to difference between other two ranks.  Grater than or less than symbol acceptable. (first rank is greater than second rank)
  • 7. Interval Scale  In the case of interval scale, the intervals are adjusted in terms of some rule that has been established as a basis for making the units equal.  The primary limitation of the interval scale is the lack of a true zero.  For ex: Temperature (in degrees Fahrenheit): 58,63,78,100 etc. Its true that 63>58, 90-70 = 108- 88 (same temperature change). But we can’t say 126 is twice as hot as 63 even though126/63 =2.  Because convert in to Centigrade scale (126 become 52) and (63 become 17). Now 53/17= 3. This is because of number 0 of neither scale is indicative of the absence of whatever quantity we are trying to measure.  So no meaning of Quotient in interval scale.
  • 8. Ratio Scale  Ratio scales have an absolute or true zero of measurement.  For ex: Zero point in centimeter of length indicate complete absence of Length (height, volume etc.)  Ratio scale is allowed to do all arithmetic operation which allowed for real number.
  • 9. Sources of error in Measurement  Respondent : Little Knowledge in that area and transient factors like fatigue, boredom and anxiety etc.  Situation: Situation demands respondent not to give correct answer.  Measurer: The interviewer can distort responses by rewording or reordering questions.  Instrument: Error may arise because of the defective measuring instrument. (complex words, ambiguous meanings, poor printing, inadequate space for replies, response choice omissions)
  • 10. Test of Measurement  Test of Validity  Test of Reliability  Test of Practicality
  • 11. Test of Validity  Validity is the most critical criterion and indicates the degree to which an instrument measures what it is supposed to measure.  Content Validity  Extent to which a measuring instrument provides adequate coverage of the topic under study. It determined by judgmental and intuitive (Panel also decide sometime)  Criterion related validity  Measure of how well one variable or set of variables predicts an outcome based on information from other variables. It measured by correlation.  Construct validity  the degree to which a test measures what it claims, to be measuring.it determined by various statistical
  • 12. Test of Reliability  A measuring instrument is reliable if it provides consistent results.  Reliable instrument need not be a valid instrument (For ex: Scale that overweight 5 kg always give reliable).  But Valid Instrument is always reliable.  Two aspects of reliability  Stability: Consistent results with repeated measurements of the same person and with the same instrument.  Equivalence: Considers how much error may get introduced by different investigators or different samples of the items being studied.
  • 13. Test of practicality  Practicality can judged in terms of economy, convenience and interpretability.  Length of measuring instrument, observation time, interview time and data collection method are play important role in economic.  Convenience: measuring instrument should be easy to administer (proper layout of the measuring instrument, clear instruction to respondent)  Interpretability: Persons other than the designers of the test are to interpret the results . supplemented by (a) detailed instructions for administering the test (b) scoring keys (c) evidence about the reliability and (d) guides for using the test and for interpreting results.
  • 14. Quality of Good Measurement  Precise  Unambiguous  Free from error  Reliable  Valid  Practical
  • 15. Development of Measurement tool  Concept Development  Understand the major concept pertaining to studies.  Specification of concept dimension  It accomplish by deduction.  Selection and development of indicators for measuring each concept element.  Use scales or question to measure knowledge, opinion etc.,  Formation of index  Combine different measurement in to single number or index.
  • 16. Measurement Scales  All the scales are broadly classified in to two categories  Comparative Scale ( the respondent is asked to compare one variable against another)  Non Comparative Scale ( respondents need only evaluate a single variable)
  • 17. Comparative Scale  Paired comparison  Every factor has to be paired with every other factor in turn.  Each of the objections is paired by the researcher so that with 5 factors, as in this example, there are 10 pairs.  n(n-1)/2
  • 18. Non Comparative Scale  Continuous rating scales: The respondents are asked to give a rating by placing a mark at the appropriate position on a continuous line.
  • 19. Non Comparative Scale  Itemized rating scale: With an itemized scale, respondents are provided with a scale having numbers and/or brief descriptions associated with each category and are asked to select one of the limited number of categories, ordered in terms of scale position.
  • 20. Non Comparative Scale  Semantic Scale: This type of scale makes extensive use of words rather than numbers.  Semantic Differential: The respondent is asked to choose where his or her position lies, on a scale between two bipolar adjectives. Semantic differentials can be used to measure opinions, attitudes and values on a psychometrically controlled scale.
  • 21. Non Comparative Scale  Likert scales: A Likert scale is what is termed a summated instrument scale.
  • 22. Guttman Scaling  Also known as  Scalogram analysis  Cumulative scaling  Purpose:  Establish a one-dimensional continuum  Perfectly predict item responses from total score  Seldom perfect in practice
  • 23. Gutman Scaling  Start with a large set of items that you think all reflect the same construct.  Have many judges rate each statement with respect to whether it is favorable with respect to the construct - a yes/no rating.  Lay out a table.