yes
Interval scales have measurements which are in equal distance from each other. For example, the difference between 70 degrees and 80 degrees is 10, which is the same as the difference between 40 degrees and 50 degrees. Ratio scales are similar to interval scales but include an absolute 0 measurement, which signifies the point when the characteristic being measured vanishes. For example, income (measured in dollars) at 0 means no income at all. Basically, interval and ratio scales are the same, but ratio scales must be able to be measured at a zero starting point.
interval
It is actually a ratio scale, which is more demanding than an interval scale.
Ratio
It is a ratio scale of measurement.
Nominal Scale < Ordinal< Interval < Ratio
Ratio. It has a true zero.
Income is a ratio measure. In ratio measures, one can order categories, specify the difference between two categories, and the value of zero on the variable represents the absence of the variable. Thus, income can take on values of $0, $10, $30,000, etc. Zero dollar income means the absence of income, making income a ratio measurement.
yes
Interval scales have measurements which are in equal distance from each other. For example, the difference between 70 degrees and 80 degrees is 10, which is the same as the difference between 40 degrees and 50 degrees. Ratio scales are similar to interval scales but include an absolute 0 measurement, which signifies the point when the characteristic being measured vanishes. For example, income (measured in dollars) at 0 means no income at all. Basically, interval and ratio scales are the same, but ratio scales must be able to be measured at a zero starting point.
It is an interval scale. It is not a ratio scale, the next higher level, because the zero is arbitrary and not unique from one calendar to another.
interval
The year is interval scale (no natural zero); your age is ratio.
On the "category axis", the scale may be nominal, ordinal, interval or ratio scale. On the frequency axis the scale must be numerical.On the "category axis", the scale may be nominal, ordinal, interval or ratio scale. On the frequency axis the scale must be numerical.On the "category axis", the scale may be nominal, ordinal, interval or ratio scale. On the frequency axis the scale must be numerical.On the "category axis", the scale may be nominal, ordinal, interval or ratio scale. On the frequency axis the scale must be numerical.
It is actually a ratio scale, which is more demanding than an interval scale.
No, it is a ratio scale.