A Fresh Way to Do Statistics
JASP 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
JASP 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
JASP Resources
JASP 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
Before you do anything else, we strongly recommend that you visit the JASP YouTube channel and the ‘How to Use JASP’ page, where you can find introductory blog posts and videos. Below is some general information about JASP that may be helpful as you analyze your first data set. We invite you to post any remaining questions on the JASP forum or on the JASP GitHub page.
PSPP is a free software application for analysis of sampled data, intended as a free alternative for IBM SPSS Statistics. It has a graphical user interface and conventional command-line interface.
View this short video tutorial on how to download and install your PSPP Software.
A brief list of some of the PSPP's features follows below:
Support for over 1 billion cases.
Support for over 1 billion variables.
Syntax and data files which are compatible with those of SPSS.
A choice of terminal or graphical user interface.
A choice of text, postscript, pdf, opendocument or html output formats.
Inter-operability with Gnumeric, LibreOffice, OpenOffice.Org and other free software.
Easy data import from spreadsheets, text files and database sources.
The capability to open, analyse and edit two or more datasets concurrently. They can also be merged, joined or concatenated.
A user interface supporting all common character sets and which has been translated to multiple languages.
Fast statistical procedures, even on very large data sets.