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Re: st: Use of Stata now fastest growing
From
Jeph Herrin <[email protected]>
To
[email protected]
Subject
Re: st: Use of Stata now fastest growing
Date
Fri, 17 May 2013 13:49:37 -0400
To complement the Scholar pattern we can look at Google trend to see how these have fared as search terms:
http://www.google.com/trends/explore#q=stata%2C%20sas%2C%20spss&cmpt=q
While searches for SAS and SPSS have been slowly declining over the last decade, those for Stata have been increasing
(this is slightly inflated by the fact that "stata" is a common Spanish word, apparently). There is, however, no large
bump in or before 2005, though a small dip.
cheers,
Jeph
On 5/16/2013 2:40 PM, Muenchen, Robert A (Bob) wrote:
I replied to Roland on my blog, but it's a very intriguing question so here's my response for Statalist readers. Is anyone aware of a change, perhaps in the APA Publication Manual, suggesting that people stop citing software around 2005? Or perhaps a year or two earlier given the publication lag?
Cheers,
Bob
-------My response from blog regarding hump in Fig. 2 of http://bit.ly/10nMabo:
That's a question that has mystified me for several years. Other than SAS and SPSS, Systat was #3 during the "hump" years but it did not show that hump. I added all the packages together to see if it smoothed things out. It did not; the plot looked much like SPSS by itself, just at a higher level.
I've asked quite few people about this, including the people in charge of SPSS development, and no one is quite sure why there's such a radical shift.
One possibility for the drop off is that the recession cut government grant funding sharply. But you'd have to assume that for some reason it affected SAS and SPSS but not the other packages. That might be caused by the fact that more established researchers A) got more grants (and so more cuts) and B) being older they also used the older packages.
Another possibility is the retirement of the baby boomers. If they tended to use the packages that have been around longer, then SPSS and SAS would have been disproportionately affected.
...later I commented to another reader:
Competition from the packages shown in this set of graphs definitely cannot balance out that hump (I've plotted it to make sure) but it's possible that competition from other packages that do statistics might. MATLAB, Mathematica, RapidMiner, Weka, SPSS Modeler, SAS Enterprise Miner, Spotfire, Tableau, KXEN, and Salford's CART, TREENET, MARS, etc. must have been used in a lot of scholarly publications and many were not popular before 2005. However, in academia I don't see the classic SPSS user using any of them. Stata is the only thing I see chomping away at the SPSS marketshare in academia.
-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:owner-
[email protected]] On Behalf Of roland andersson
Sent: Tuesday, May 14, 2013 4:25 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: st: Use of Stata now fastest growing
How can we explain that the total number of hits for all the packages show such
a peak in 2005? Do I understand correctly that the calculations are done on
publications that report which software that were used? Maybe this practice is
changing?
Roland E Andersson
2013/5/14 Muenchen, Robert A (Bob) <[email protected]>:
Hi All,
My latest data shows that Stata is now the fastest growing software for
scholarly use.
http://r4stats.com/2013/05/14/beginning-of-the-end-v2/
Cheers,
Bob
==================================================
Bob Muenchen (pronounced Min'-chen)
Accredited Professional Statistician(tm)
Manager, Research Computing Support
Voice: (865) 974-5230
Email: [email protected]
UT Web Site: http://oit.utk.edu/research
Personal Web Site: http://r4stats.com
News: http://itc2.utk.edu/newsletter_monthly/
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