Thanks for this video! Little question though: is it possible to change the equaling sign for a “contains”? In my example, I have a list of names, for example Lockhart, Miss Sally. In my variable I want to display whether the person is a man or a woman, so if the name contains miss I’d like it to display 1. Is that a thing?
If you'd like to create a 2-group dummy code for the 5 groups, you can follow the same steps in this video. However, with 5 groups, it's better to create contrast codes. I have a series of videos explaining how to do this. Here is a link to the first video in my series: ua-cam.com/video/2oI2f7WzIqU/v-deo.html&ab_channel=BradleyPan-Weisz
To be clear, you should make dummy codes when you are comparing 2 groups (your independent variable or predictor), not based on how many options you have on your response scale (dependent or outcome variable).
I provided the link to the playlist for creating codes for more than 2 group (called contrast codes, not dummy codes) in an earlier comment. ua-cam.com/play/PLz1uNv99Tm6rSg4JGl8Mf6jOXzvGrdpdt.html
Thank you - very helpful!
Thanks for this video! Little question though: is it possible to change the equaling sign for a “contains”? In my example, I have a list of names, for example Lockhart, Miss Sally. In my variable I want to display whether the person is a man or a woman, so if the name contains miss I’d like it to display 1. Is that a thing?
Thank you for this video
Brilliant! Thank you so much :D
thank you!
Here you have two options, course, no course. I have like 5, so how do I code it?
If you'd like to create a 2-group dummy code for the 5 groups, you can follow the same steps in this video. However, with 5 groups, it's better to create contrast codes. I have a series of videos explaining how to do this. Here is a link to the first video in my series: ua-cam.com/video/2oI2f7WzIqU/v-deo.html&ab_channel=BradleyPan-Weisz
Did you figure this out? How to make dummy codes with more than 2 options ?
@@bradleypan-weisz2105 on which video you are showing that? I should also make dummy code for Likert so it's 5
To be clear, you should make dummy codes when you are comparing 2 groups (your independent variable or predictor), not based on how many options you have on your response scale (dependent or outcome variable).
I provided the link to the playlist for creating codes for more than 2 group (called contrast codes, not dummy codes) in an earlier comment. ua-cam.com/play/PLz1uNv99Tm6rSg4JGl8Mf6jOXzvGrdpdt.html