gvleioras
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Thank you for your answer! I thought more carefully about which are my research questions and organized the 11 categories into two super-categories. And then I created a three-value variable, with 1 (answers that fall only in the first super-catego…
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@LLindeloo, Thank you for your thorough explanation. When I create this dummy variable, what variables do I use for the chi-square or t-tests? All other variables of my dataset? Or the demographics? Or something else? Also, does it make sense to ex…
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Not a JASP person, but I think this question should be placed here https://jasp-stats.org/feature-requests-bug-reports/
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I would go to Excel, then use and IF column to transform the vars 1, 2 & 3, and then the AVERAGE in a new column. Then save in .csv and open with JASP. Or save in the same .csv file and then JASP will update the data file you have already open.
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From what I know, if you double click on the data, then your file opens in Excel and there you can do whatever calculations you want. Then you save the file, and the changes are fed in the opened data file.
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Thank you for your answers!
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Thanks! It helped!
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Do I proceed in writing with the results I sent you, or is there a possibility for JASP failure?
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Not sure if this will be of any help (I can also provide you the dataset, if need be), but (I think that) the JASP "normal" Bayesian ANOVA and the BAIN ANOVA give different results (not sure about the specifications, but the overall conclu…
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Thanks! (timely and helpful, as always!) I followed the first suggestion (dus, BAIN in JASP). If I understand correctly, the comparison of the support that each hypothesis receives is given in the Bayes Factor matrix, right? I am not sure how to rea…
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Unfortunately, the link to this paper does not work...