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Qiqqa (pronounced "Quicker") is a free and open-source [1] [2] software that allows researchers to work with thousands of PDFs. [3] It combines PDF reference management tools, a citation manager, and a mind map brainstorming tool.
There are a few reviews of free statistical software. There were two reviews in journals (but not peer reviewed), one by Zhu and Kuljaca [26] and another article by Grant that included mainly a brief review of R. [27] Zhu and Kuljaca outlined some useful characteristics of software, such as ease of use, having a number of statistical procedures and ability to develop new procedures.
Computer-assisted (or aided) qualitative data analysis software (CAQDAS) offers tools that assist with qualitative research such as transcription analysis, coding and text interpretation, recursive abstraction, content analysis, discourse analysis, [1] grounded theory methodology, etc.
ATLAS.ti is a tool that supports locating, coding/tagging, and annotating features within bodies of unstructured data; it also offers visualization functions.The software is used by researchers in a wide variety of fields, and it supports data in text, graphical, audio, video, and geospatial format. [3]
The Google Books Ngram Viewer was developed in the hope of opening a new window to quantitative research in the humanities field, and the database contained 500 billion words from 5.2 million books publicly available from the very beginning. [2] [3] [9]
All texts are available for free download in PDF format. The platform features advanced search capabilities and optical character recognition (OCR) options The Society for the Preservation of Hebrew Books Heidelberg University Digital Library: General Scientific publications, European historic literature of German and Latin languages
EViews is a statistical package for Windows, used mainly for time-series oriented econometric analysis. It is developed by Quantitative Micro Software (QMS), now a part of IHS. Version 1.0 was released in March 1994, and replaced MicroTSP. [1] The TSP software and programming language had been originally developed by Robert Hall in 1965. The ...
The proprietary output can be exported to text or Microsoft Word, PDF, Excel, and other formats. Alternatively, output can be captured as data (using the OMS command), as text, tab-delimited text, PDF, XLS, HTML, XML, SPSS dataset or a variety of graphic image formats (JPEG, PNG, BMP and EMF). The SPSS logo used prior to the renaming in January ...