Difference between revisions of "Verbatim Overview"
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An example of an structured survey question would be: "Please select your purchased product from the following list". An example of an unstructured survey question would be: "Please comment as to why our service did not meet your needs". | An example of an structured survey question would be: "Please select your purchased product from the following list". An example of an unstructured survey question would be: "Please comment as to why our service did not meet your needs". | ||
− | mTAB supports the analysis of unstructured survey questions including the ability to cross | + | mTAB supports the analysis of unstructured survey questions including the ability to cross tabulate unstructured survey questions with structured questions, and view unstructured questions of a filtered set of respondents based upon the filter criteria of structured questions. |
In this way, an analyst can limit the number of unstructured responses to review (i.e. read over) by filtering down the respondent cases to a specific criteria like "unsatisfied with the sales experience". | In this way, an analyst can limit the number of unstructured responses to review (i.e. read over) by filtering down the respondent cases to a specific criteria like "unsatisfied with the sales experience". | ||
− | mTAB's verbatim report view can be exported to a spreadsheet | + | mTAB's verbatim report view, which exposes unstructured question responses, can be exported to a spreadsheet. The tag cloud feature within mTAB's verbatim report view can help quantify the analysis of the displayed unstructured survey responses. |
===How to use verbatim questions=== | ===How to use verbatim questions=== |
Latest revision as of 13:28, 2 December 2013
You can think of responses to survey questions as either "structured", meaning a respondent has provided a response or responses from a list provided to them as part of the survey, or "unstructured" meaning the respondent provided a verbatim or textual response to a survey question.
An example of an structured survey question would be: "Please select your purchased product from the following list". An example of an unstructured survey question would be: "Please comment as to why our service did not meet your needs".
mTAB supports the analysis of unstructured survey questions including the ability to cross tabulate unstructured survey questions with structured questions, and view unstructured questions of a filtered set of respondents based upon the filter criteria of structured questions.
In this way, an analyst can limit the number of unstructured responses to review (i.e. read over) by filtering down the respondent cases to a specific criteria like "unsatisfied with the sales experience".
mTAB's verbatim report view, which exposes unstructured question responses, can be exported to a spreadsheet. The tag cloud feature within mTAB's verbatim report view can help quantify the analysis of the displayed unstructured survey responses.
Contents
How to use verbatim questions
- Main article: How to use verbatim questions
Bigrams, Trigrams and Porter Stemming
- Main article: Bigrams, Trigrams and Porter Stemming
Tag Clouds
- Main article: Tag Clouds
Selected column tag cloud
- Main article: Selected column tag cloud
Tag cloud frequencies
- Main article: Tag cloud frequencies
Tag cloud breadcrumbs
- Main article: Tag cloud breadcrumbs
Verbatim Filtering
- Main article: Verbatim Filtering