{"id":195136,"date":"2020-08-07T09:52:29","date_gmt":"2020-08-07T07:52:29","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.scribbr.nl\/?p=195136"},"modified":"2022-06-09T09:09:51","modified_gmt":"2022-06-09T07:09:51","slug":"nominal-data","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.scribbr.com\/statistics\/nominal-data\/","title":{"rendered":"Nominal Data | Definition, Examples, Data Collection & Analysis"},"content":{"rendered":"
Nominal data <\/strong>is labelled into mutually exclusive categories within a variable. These categories cannot be ordered in a meaningful way.<\/p>\n For example, preferred mode of transportation is a nominal variable, because the data is sorted into categories: car, bus, train, tram, bicycle, etc.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n The level of measurement<\/a> indicates how precisely data is recorded. There are 4 hierarchical levels: nominal, ordinal<\/a>, interval<\/a>, and ratio<\/a>. The higher the level, the more complex the measurement.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n Nominal data is the least precise and complex level. The word nominal means \u201cin name,\u201d so this kind of data can only be labelled. It does not have a rank order, equal spacing between values, or a true zero value.<\/p>\n At a nominal level, each response or observation fits only into one category.<\/p>\n Nominal data can be expressed in words or in numbers. But even if there are numerical labels for your data, you can\u2019t order the labels in a meaningful way or perform arithmetic operations with them.<\/p>\n In social scientific research, nominal variables often include gender, ethnicity, political preferences or student identity number.<\/p>\n Variables that can be coded in only 2 ways (e.g. yes\/no or employed\/unemployed) are called binary or dichotomous. Since the order of the labels within those variables doesn\u2019t matter, they are types of nominal variable.<\/p>\n Nominal data can be collected through open- or closed-ended survey questions.<\/p>\n If the variable you are interested in has only a few possible labels that capture all of the data, use closed-ended questions.<\/p>\nLevels of measurement<\/h2>\n
Examples of nominal data<\/h2>\n
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\n \nVariable<\/th>\n Categories<\/th>\n<\/tr>\n<\/thead>\n \n Zip code<\/th>\n \n \n
\n Political preferences<\/th>\n \n \n
\n Employment status<\/th>\n \n \n
\n Literary genre<\/th>\n \n \n
How to collect nominal data<\/h2>\n