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How meaningful are data from Likert scales?: an evaluation of how ratings are made and the role of the response shift in the socially disadvantaged.
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

How meaningful are data from Likert scales?: an evaluation of how ratings are made and the role of the response shift in the socially disadvantaged.

J Ogden and J Lo
Journal of Health Psychology, Vol.17(3), pp.350-361
04/2012

Abstract

Likert scales relating to quality of life were completed by the homeless (N = 75); first year students (N = 301) and a town population (N = 72). Participants also completed free text questions. The scale and free text data were often contradictory and the results highlighted three processes to account for these disparities: i) frame of reference: current salient issues influenced how questions were interpreted; ii) within-subject comparisons: ratings were based on expectations given past experiences; iii) time frame: those with more stable circumstances showed habituation to their level of deprivation. Likert scale data should be understood within the context of how ratings are made.
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Ogden 2012 How meaningful are data from Likert scales likertscaleshomeless101.50 kBDownloadView
TextSRIDA Open Access
url
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1359105311417192View
Published (Version of record)
url
http://hpq.sagepub.com/content/17/3/350View

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