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<title><![CDATA[Comentarios al libro: PERSON-CENTERED METHODS]]></title>
<link><![CDATA[https://api.biblioeteca.com/biblioeteca.web/titulo/person-centered-methods]]></link>
<description><![CDATA[This book takes an easy-to-understand look at the statistical approach called the person-centered method. Instead of analyzing means, variances and covariances of scale scores as in the common variable-centered approach, the person-centered approach analyzes persons or objects grouped according to their characteristic patterns or configurations in contingency tables. The main focus of the book will be on Configural Frequency Analysis (CFA; Lienert and Krauth, 1975) which is a statistical method that looks for over and under-frequented cells or patterns. Over frequented means that the observations in this cell or configuration are observed more often than expected, under-frequented means that this cell or configuration is observed less often than expected. In CFA a pattern or configuration that contains more observed cases than expected is called a <i>type</i>; similarly, a pattern or configuration that is less observed than expected are called an <i>antitype</i>. CFA is similar to log-linear modeling. In log-linear modeling the goal is to come up with a fitting model including all important variables. Instead of fitting a model, CFA looks at the significant residuals of a log-linear model.<p>The book describes the use of an R-package called <b>confreq (</b>derived from <b>Conf</b>igural <b>Freq</b>uency Analysis). The use of the software package is described and demonstrated with data examples.]]></description>
<lastBuildDate>Sat, 06 Jun 2026 03:46:22 +0000</lastBuildDate>
<language>es</language>
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