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I want to do some statistical analysis and probability calculations. my
professor advised me to use spss, which I am totally unfamiliar with. Does this software offers functions that excel can not perform I prefer to do all my analysis with Excel which I am used to it. -- Rasoul Khoshravan Azar Kobe University, Kobe, Japan |
#2
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Hi,
yes, SPSS is a significantly more specialized and robust application for statistical analysis. To my knowledge, it and a competitor (SAS) are the market standard for stat analysis - I've seen and/or used it at clinical trial firms, marketing agencies, archaeology labs, and education research. It can manipulate and analyze data in many ways that Excel cannot, or at least, not as easily. It's also a mild pain to learn how to use well. Depending on what your studies are, it may be a very good investment to learn SPSS (or SAS). For one-offs or a fairly basic analysis, Excel can be fine, of course. ..o. On Jul 11, 8:08 am, Khoshravan wrote: I want to do some statistical analysis and probability calculations. my professor advised me to use spss, which I am totally unfamiliar with. Does this software offers functions that excel can not perform I prefer to do all my analysis with Excel which I am used to it. -- Rasoul Khoshravan Azar Kobe University, Kobe, Japan |
#3
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What is "market standard" depends somewhat on what market you are talking
about. But that designation should surely also include S-PLUS. Also Minitab has a firm foothold with 6-sigma instructors. R has come on strong in the last few years and according to Chambers at the 2004 Joint Statistical Meetings of the North American statistical societies "is becoming the proto-standard system for developing and sharing new statistical techniques". R is even free to download and use http://www.r-project.org/ Since the OP's professor recommended SPSS, I would guess that the OP is in a social sicences discipline where SPSS would have the advantage of familiarity to those reviewing his work. " wrote: Hi, yes, SPSS is a significantly more specialized and robust application for statistical analysis. To my knowledge, it and a competitor (SAS) are the market standard for stat analysis - I've seen and/or used it at clinical trial firms, marketing agencies, archaeology labs, and education research. It can manipulate and analyze data in many ways that Excel cannot, or at least, not as easily. It's also a mild pain to learn how to use well. Depending on what your studies are, it may be a very good investment to learn SPSS (or SAS). For one-offs or a fairly basic analysis, Excel can be fine, of course. ..o. On Jul 11, 8:08 am, Khoshravan wrote: I want to do some statistical analysis and probability calculations. my professor advised me to use spss, which I am totally unfamiliar with. Does this software offers functions that excel can not perform I prefer to do all my analysis with Excel which I am used to it. -- Rasoul Khoshravan Azar Kobe University, Kobe, Japan |
#4
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Jerry W. Lewis wrote...
What is "market standard" depends somewhat on what market you are talking about. But that designation should surely also include S-PLUS. Also Minitab has a firm foothold with 6-sigma instructors. .... There are a few others. I know Stata is used by some epidemiologists and agg scientists (I have odd friends). And BMDP is still used in clinical biology (and Berkeley's stats department had upper division undergrads and grad students use for coursework back in the 1980s, FWLIW.) From what I've seen, SAS is used where mainframes are used and not many other places. I've never met anyone who's used PC SAS who didn't do so simply to speed up development of processes that'd eventually run on mainframes. |
#5
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Jerry/Harlan - thanks for the elaborations.
cheers, ..o. |
#6
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My wife is going to use tis program. She is a nutritionist, and wants to
study some blood samples of firefighters for duty-stress related analysis. I am familiar with Excel but her professor has recommended her to use SPSS. -- Rasoul Khoshravan Azar Kobe University, Kobe, Japan "Jerry W. Lewis" wrote: What is "market standard" depends somewhat on what market you are talking about. But that designation should surely also include S-PLUS. Also Minitab has a firm foothold with 6-sigma instructors. R has come on strong in the last few years and according to Chambers at the 2004 Joint Statistical Meetings of the North American statistical societies "is becoming the proto-standard system for developing and sharing new statistical techniques". R is even free to download and use http://www.r-project.org/ Since the OP's professor recommended SPSS, I would guess that the OP is in a social sicences discipline where SPSS would have the advantage of familiarity to those reviewing his work. " wrote: Hi, yes, SPSS is a significantly more specialized and robust application for statistical analysis. To my knowledge, it and a competitor (SAS) are the market standard for stat analysis - I've seen and/or used it at clinical trial firms, marketing agencies, archaeology labs, and education research. It can manipulate and analyze data in many ways that Excel cannot, or at least, not as easily. It's also a mild pain to learn how to use well. Depending on what your studies are, it may be a very good investment to learn SPSS (or SAS). For one-offs or a fairly basic analysis, Excel can be fine, of course. ..o. On Jul 11, 8:08 am, Khoshravan wrote: I want to do some statistical analysis and probability calculations. my professor advised me to use spss, which I am totally unfamiliar with. Does this software offers functions that excel can not perform I prefer to do all my analysis with Excel which I am used to it. -- Rasoul Khoshravan Azar Kobe University, Kobe, Japan |
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