CHAPTER 9 Summarizing and Graphing Your Data 113
After looking at the frequencies in Table 9-2, you may be curious about the per-
centages, which would make these numbers more comparable. But a cross-tab
can get very cluttered if you try to include them, as there are different types: the
column percentage, the row percentage, and the total percentage. For example,
the 60 rural residents with commercial health insurance in Table 9-2 comprise
46.9 percent of all participants with commercial health insurance, because
60 divided by the total number with commercial health insurance, which is 128
(the column total), equals 46.9 percent.
Groups are often compared across columns, and if that is the intention, column
percentages should be displayed. But if you divide these same 60 rural residents
with commercial insurance by their row total of 169 rural residents, you find they
make up 30.6 percent of all rural residents, which is a row percentage. And if you
go on to divide these 60 participants by the total sample size of the study, which
is 422, you find that they make up 14.2 percent of all participants in the study.
Categorical data are typically displayed graphically as frequency bar charts and as
pie charts:»
» Frequency bar charts: Displaying the spread of participants across
the different categories of a variable is commonly done by a bar chart
(see Figure 9-1a). Generally, statistical programs are used to make bar charts.
To create a bar chart manually from a tally of participants in each category,
you draw a graph containing one vertical bar for each category, making the
height proportional to the number of participants in that category.»
» Pie charts: Pie charts indicate the relative number of participants in each
category by the angle of a circular wedge, which can also be considered more
deliciously as a piece of the pie. To create a pie chart manually, you multiply
the percentage of participants in each category by 360, which is the number
of degrees of arc in a full circle, and then divide by 100. By doing that, you are
essentially figuring out what proportion of the circle to devote to that pie
piece. Next, you draw a circle with a compass, and then split it up into wedges
using a protractor — remember from high school math? Trust us, it’s easier to
use statistical software.
Most scientific writers recommend the usage of bar charts over pie charts. They
express more information in a smaller space, and allow for more accurate visual
comparisons.