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  2. SPSS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SPSS

    SPSS 27 - 2019, June [17] (and 27.0.1 in November, 2020 [18]) SPSS 28 - 2021, May [19] SPSS 29 - 2022, Sept [20] SPSS 30 - 2024, Sept [21] SPSS was released in its first version in 1968 as the Statistical Package for the Social Sciences (SPSS) after being developed by Norman H. Nie, Dale H. Bent, and C. Hadlai Hull.

  3. Comparison of statistical packages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_statistical...

    "A Short Preview of Free Statistical Software Packages for Teaching Statistics to Industrial Technology Majors" (PDF). Journal of Industrial Technology. 21 (2). Archived from the original (PDF) on October 25, 2005.

  4. SPSS Modeler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SPSS_Modeler

    IBM SPSS Modeler is a data mining and text analytics software application from IBM. It is used to build predictive models and conduct other analytic tasks. It has a visual interface which allows users to leverage statistical and data mining algorithms without programming.

  5. SPSS Inc. - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SPSS_Inc.

    SPSS Inc. was a software house headquartered in Chicago and incorporated in Delaware, most noted for the proprietary software of the same name SPSS. The company was started in 1968 when Norman Nie, Dale Bent, and Hadlai "Tex" Hull developed and started selling the SPSS software. The company was incorporated in 1975, and Nie was CEO from 1975 ...

  6. MedCalc - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MedCalc

    [2] [3] [4] It has an integrated spreadsheet for data input and can import files in several formats (Excel, SPSS, CSV, ...). MedCalc includes basic parametric and non-parametric statistical procedures and graphs such as descriptive statistics , ANOVA , Mann–Whitney test , Wilcoxon test , χ 2 test , correlation , linear as well as non-linear ...

  7. SAS (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SAS_(software)

    SAS is a software suite that can mine, alter, manage and retrieve data from a variety of sources and perform statistical analysis on it. [3] SAS provides a graphical point-and-click user interface for non-technical users and more through the SAS language.

  8. JASP - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JASP

    JASP (Jeffreys’s Amazing Statistics Program [2]) is a free and open-source program for statistical analysis supported by the University of Amsterdam. It is designed to be easy to use, and familiar to users of SPSS. It offers standard analysis procedures in both their classical and Bayesian form.

  9. NVivo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NVivo

    NVivo is intended to help users organize and analyze non-numerical or unstructured data.Its developers state that it helps qualitative researchers to organize, analyze and find insights in unstructured or qualitative data like interviews, open-ended survey responses, journal articles, social media and web content, where deep levels of analysis on small or large volumes of data are required.