Interval Scale (Dictionary Entry)

Term

Interval Scale

Definitions

Basic Empirical Operations

Determination of equality of intervals or differences

Mathematical Group Structure

General linear group

x' = ax + b

Permissible Statistics (invariantive)

Mean

Standard deviation

Rank-order correlation

Product-moment correlation

(https://open-measure.atlassian.net/wiki/spaces/BIB/pages/5965659, p. 3, Table 1)

With the interval scale we come to a form that is "quantitative" in the ordinary sense of the word. Almost all the usual statistical measures are applicable here, unless they are the kinds that imply a knowledge of a 'true' zero point. The zero point on an interval scale is a matter of convention or convenience, as is shown by the fact that the scale form remains invariant when a constant is added.

This point is illustrated by our two scales of temperature, Centigrade and Fahrenheit. Equal intervals of temperature are scaled off by noting equal volumes of expansion; an arbitrary zero is agreed upon for each scale; and a numerical value on one of the scales is transformed into a value on the other by means of an equation of the form x'= ax+ b. Our scales of time offer a similar example. Dates on one calendar are transformed to those on another by way of this same equation. On these scales, of course, it is meaningless to say that one value is twice or some other proportion greater than another.

Periods of time, however, can be measured on ratio scales and one period may be correctly defined as double another. The same is probably true of temperature measured on the so-called Absolute Scale.

Most psychological measurement aspires to create interval scales, and it sometimes succeeds. The problem usually is to devise operations for equalizing the units of the scales-a problem not always easy of solution but one for which there are several possible modes of attack. Only occasionally is there concern for the location of a 'true' zero point, because the human attributes measured by psychologists usually exist in a positive degree that is large compared with the range of its variation. In this respect these attributes are analogous to temperature as it is encountered in everyday life. Intelligence, for example, is usefully assessed on ordinal scales which try to approximate interval scales, and it is not necessary to define what zero intelligence would mean.

If some objects (x1, x2, ...) are defined on an interval scale, then it is meaningful to
say that (x1 - x2) is greater than (x3 - x4) (e.g., the difference between the highest
and lowest temperatures today is greater than the corresponding difference
yesterday).

See Also

 


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