I recently came across Hans Rosling's 2007 TED talk on poverty and statistics. (Video is embedded below.) The talk is entertaining and thought provoking. Dr Rosling founded a non-profit organization called GapMinder. Their goal is to be: “fact tank that promotes a fact based world view" Gapminder is a good source for free Read More »
I recently came across Hans Rosling's 2007 TED talk on poverty and statistics. (Video is embedded below.) The talk is entertaining and thought provoking.
Dr Rosling founded a non-profit organization called GapMinder. Their goal is to be:
“fact tank that promotes a fact based world view"
Gapminder is a good source for free
Read More »
STATISTICA 6 is a 9 year old application. We released it in 2001. It is not compatible with Windows Vista or Windows 7. You will need to upgrade to STATISTICA 9. StatSoft is offering an upgrade discount for past customers. And you may find the new features in STATISTICA 7, STATISTICA 8 and STATISTICA 9 to be useful for your tasks. Read More »
STATISTICA 6 is a 9 year old application. We released it in 2001.
It is not compatible with Windows Vista or Windows 7. You will need to upgrade to STATISTICA 9.
StatSoft is offering an upgrade discount for past customers. And you may find the new features in STATISTICA 7, STATISTICA 8 and STATISTICA 9 to be useful for your tasks.
A customer asked recently how to create a random subset. And I thought this would be a good topic for a blog. Let us pretend... We want to develop a credit scoring model Read More »
A customer asked recently how to create a random subset. And I thought this would be a good topic for a blog.
Let us pretend...
We want to develop a credit scoring model
We recently received a question from an Electronic Statistics Textbook visitor. The visitor asked: Read More »
We recently received a question from an Electronic Statistics Textbook visitor. The visitor asked:
A random factor is a variable of interest for which we selected only a subset of the population levels to test, but which we still want our results to be applicable to all levels possible. For example, suppose that in a factory we sample products from 5 workers, even though we have 100 workers total. Since we want our results to be generalizable to all workers in the factory, not just the 5 we selected, we would treat this variable as a random factor. When a process involves random factors, a common analysis is to calculate the variability in the overall process that is due to these random factors. To quantify this number, we will compute Components of Variance. Following is a guide on how to compute the Components of Variance in STATISTICA: Read More »
A random factor is a variable of interest for which we selected only a subset of the population levels to test, but which we still want our results to be applicable to all levels possible. For example, suppose that in a factory we sample products from 5 workers, even though we have 100 workers total. Since we want our results to be generalizable to all workers in the factory, not just the 5 we selected, we would treat this variable as a random factor. When a process involves random factors, a common analysis is to calculate the variability in the overall process that is due to these random factors. To quantify this number, we will compute Components of Variance.
Following is a guide on how to compute the Components of Variance in STATISTICA:
STATISTICA projects provide the means to save your work and return to it later. A project is a "snapshot" of STATISTICA at the time it was saved, i.e., the tool saves your input data, results (graphs, spreadsheets, etc.), analyses, and/or Data Miner workspaces that are currently open into a single project. Upon opening the project, all of these items will be restored exactly as they were when the project was saved. This tool is a time saver, as it allows you to continue the analysis instead of starting it over again. Read More »
STATISTICA projects provide the means to save your work and return to it later. A project is a "snapshot" of STATISTICA at the time it was saved, i.e., the tool saves your input data, results (graphs, spreadsheets, etc.), analyses, and/or Data Miner workspaces that are currently open into a single project. Upon opening the project, all of these items will be restored exactly as they were when the project was saved. This tool is a time saver, as it allows you to continue the analysis instead of starting it over again.
STATISTICA Receives Top Ratings Rexer Analytics 3rd Annual Data Miner Survey In a survey of 710 data miners primarily from industry conducted by Rexer Analytics, STATISTICA Data Miner received top ratings. This survey examined the data processing techniques and tools used in data mining practice, types of data analyzed, and challenges encountered, as well as the opinions of the respondents regarding the preferred data mining tools (software applications) used in their work. The section on the software applications focused on the question regarding which products available on the market are used by respondents as their "primary tools," and what is the level of satisfaction of the respondents with the software they use... Read More »
If there are certain menu commands that you use often, you may want to assign a keyboard shortcut key combination to the command in order to access the command faster and easier. Read More »
If there are certain menu commands that you use often, you may want to assign a keyboard shortcut key combination to the command in order to access the command faster and easier.
Located at the top of many results dialogs is a Summary Box, and sometimes it may be useful to print this summary. Read More »
Located at the top of many results dialogs is a Summary Box, and sometimes it may be useful to print this summary.
Don't be intimidated by Visual Basic. Follow this short example to create a fun program that you can run in STATISTICA. Read More »
Don't be intimidated by Visual Basic. Follow this short example to create a fun program that you can run in STATISTICA.