cross tabulation
(noun)
a presentation of data in a tabular form to aid in identifying a relationship between variables
Examples of cross tabulation in the following topics:
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Cross Tabulation
- Cross tabulation (or crosstabs for short) is a statistical process that summarizes categorical data to create a contingency table.
- Cross tabulation (or crosstabs for short) is a statistical process that summarizes categorical data to create a contingency table.
- Demonstrate how cross tabulation provides a basic picture of the interrelation between two variables and helps to find interactions between them.
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Two-mode correspondence analysis
- Correspondence analysis (rather like Latent Class Analysis) operates on multi-variate binary cross-tabulations, and its distributional assumptions are better suited to binary data.
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Testing for independence in two-way tables exercises
- The responses are cross-tabulated based on gender.
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Hispanics in WWII
- The exact number is unknown as, at the time, Hispanics were not tabulated separately and were generally included in the white population census count.
- The 36th Infantry Division fought in Italy and France, enduring heavy casualties during the crossing of the Rapido River near Monte Cassino, Italy.
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Interview Followup
- You will need to summarize the content or tabulate the ratings if you used rating scales for the interview questions.
- If you asked closed questions, you can tabulate the frequency of responses in the different categories.
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Comparing Two Populations: Paired Difference Experiment
- A contingency table used in McNemar's test tabulates the outcomes of two tests on a sample of $n$ subjects, as follows:
- A contingency table used in McNemar's test tabulates the outcomes of two tests on a sample of $n$ subjects.
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Simulating the study
- Then, as we did with the original data, we tabulate the results and determine the fraction of male sim and female sim who were promoted.
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The Cross Product
- The cross product of two vectors is a vector which is perpendicular to both of the original vectors.
- The cross product is a binary operation of two three-dimensional vectors.
- If the two original vectors are parallel to each other, the cross product will be zero.
- The cross product is denoted as $a \times b = c$.
- The geometric method of finding the cross product uses the magnitudes of the vectors and the sine of the angle between them:
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Productivity Gains from Hardware
- Early electric data processing was done by running punched cards through tabulating machines, the holes in the cards allowing electrical contact to incremental electronic counters.
- Tabulating machines were in a category called "unit record equipment," through which the flow of punched cards was arranged in a program-like sequence to allow sophisticated data processing.
- The first digital computers were more productive than tabulating machines, but not by a great amount.
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Data and Information