I think the only way to do this with CA is to ignore gender (husband/wife), and analyse the table of respondent occupation by spouse occupation. The scores for respondent occupation would then be the status scale.

Ken


At 09:11 AM 29/06/2007, you wrote:
Hello all I am looking at levels of social interaction in New Zealand society
using census data sets using simple correspondence analysis. I am  conducting
the  CA analysis on a  two-dimensional of husband/wife occupations (as is
found in the Camsis scale). I was  thinking about  whether it was possible to
generate a single set of scores representing the best-fitting intercorrelation of
these two sets of occupational categories rather than the current two
sets of scores for each dimension. Are you able to point me in the right
direction that may offer some examples or references?
Cheers Stephen

----------------------------------------------
CLASS-L list.
Instructions: http://www.classification-society.org/csna/lists.html#class-l

----------------------------------------------
CLASS-L list.
Instructions: http://www.classification-society.org/csna/lists.html#class-l

Reply via email to