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A Go Survey for Statistics Class
Posted: Tue Oct 20, 2015 8:13 pm
by scapetude
Hello everyone!
I am doing a survey for my statistics class on Go. If you have a moment and don't mind helping, then please answer the following questions. If you're more comfortable messaging me the answers, that is fine too.
1) What is your gender? Male | Female (Choose one)
2) What is your age? __________ Years old
3) What is your current Go rank? __________ Kyu | Dan (Choose one)
4) How long have you been playing Go? __________ Years
5) Have you taken breaks from playing Go? Yes | No (Choose one)
If yes, how did it affect your Go games? Positively | Negatively (Choose one)
6) Do you do Go problems every week? Yes | No (Choose one)
7) On average, how many hours do you spend playing Go in a week? __________ Hours per week
8) Do you prefer fast or slow games? Fast | Slow (Choose one)
Thank you for your assistance with my class project!
Re: A Go Survey for Statistics Class
Posted: Tue Oct 20, 2015 8:45 pm
by Abyssinica
Female
18
4 kyu
2 years
yes
positively
yes
(I don't play much, but I do many things outside of playing so bleh) 2-3
Fast
Re: A Go Survey for Statistics Class
Posted: Tue Oct 20, 2015 9:27 pm
by Shaddy
Male
22 years old
4 dan KGS
8 years
Yes
Negatively
Yes
>10
Fast
Re: A Go Survey for Statistics Class
Posted: Tue Oct 20, 2015 9:33 pm
by jeromie
1) What is your gender? Male
2) What is your age? 34 Years old
3) What is your current Go rank? 6 Kyu (KGS)
4) How long have you been playing Go? 4.5 Years
5) Have you taken breaks from playing Go? Yes
If yes, how did it affect your Go games? Neutral (It slowed my growth, but I didn't regress while taking breaks.)
6) Do you do Go problems every week? Yes
7) On average, how many hours do you spend playing Go in a week? 3 Hours per week
8) Do you prefer fast or slow games? Slow (Though medium is probably my real preference. I like games that are about an hour long, and don't generally enjoy playing people with fast time settings as much. Playing bots quickly is ok, though.)
Posted: Tue Oct 20, 2015 11:39 pm
by EdLee
Hi scaptude, may I ask which level of stats class ?
( High school, undergrad, grad school, etc. ... )
Re: A Go Survey for Statistics Class
Posted: Wed Oct 21, 2015 2:29 am
by DrStraw
I am a little skeptical when someone creates an account just to ask for personal data. I think some information about yourself and posting history is more appropriate.
Re: A Go Survey for Statistics Class
Posted: Wed Oct 21, 2015 6:48 pm
by scapetude
Thank you for participating!
EdLee wrote:Hi scaptude, may I ask which level of stats class ?
( High school, undergrad, grad school, etc. ... )
Hi EdLee,
It is for an undergrad Intro to Stat class.
DrStraw wrote:I am a little skeptical when someone creates an account just to ask for personal data. I think some information about yourself and posting history is more appropriate.
Hello DrStraw,
What you've stated is understandable. Unfortunately, I won't be able to provide a posting history since I do not have one. However, to know me a bit more, these are my answers to the survey questions:
1) What is your gender? Female
2) What is your age? 27 Years old
3) What is your current Go rank? 2 Kyu AGA
4) How long have you been playing Go? 5 Years
5) Have you taken breaks from playing Go? Yes
If yes, how did it affect your Go games? Positively
6) Do you do Go problems every week? Yes
7) On average, how many hours do you spend playing Go in a week? 1 Hour per week
8) Do you prefer fast or slow games? Slow
Re: A Go Survey for Statistics Class
Posted: Wed Oct 21, 2015 7:05 pm
by DrStraw
scapetude wrote:Thank you for participating!
EdLee wrote:Hi scaptude, may I ask which level of stats class ?
( High school, undergrad, grad school, etc. ... )
Hi EdLee,
It is for an undergrad Intro to Stat class.
DrStraw wrote:I am a little skeptical when someone creates an account just to ask for personal data. I think some information about yourself and posting history is more appropriate.
Hello DrStraw,
What you've stated is understandable. Unfortunately, I won't be able to provide a posting history since I do not have one. However, to know me a bit more, these are my answers to the survey questions:
1) What is your gender? Female
2) What is your age? 27 Years old
3) What is your current Go rank? 2 Kyu AGA
4) How long have you been playing Go? 5 Years
5) Have you taken breaks from playing Go? Yes
If yes, how did it affect your Go games? Positively
6) Do you do Go problems every week? Yes
7) On average, how many hours do you spend playing Go in a week? 1 Hour per week
8) Do you prefer fast or slow games? Slow
Okay, as a college math professor who has regularly taught Introductory Statistics I have some questions for you.
You are asking here for a probably very small volunteer sample. Has your instructor told you about how unreliable volunteer samples are? And has he explained about how sample size severely affects the reliability of results. To produce anything of significance you need to have a sample size of around 35. Are you likely to get that from a posting here? Even if you do, it is a volunteer sample and so not reliable.
I am not criticizing you for trying to gather data. I am just pointing out that you need to be aware of the reliability of what you may gain from posting here. I hope you have other sources of data.
Posted: Wed Oct 21, 2015 7:11 pm
by EdLee
scaptude wrote:7) On average, how many hours do you spend playing Go in a week? 1 Hour per week
8) Do you prefer fast or slow games? Slow
Hi scaptude,
Thanks for the info. I also prefer slow games,
and one hour (shared between two people) is very fast (way too fast) for me.

I like the US Open time setting of 90 initial minutes per person.
But it's also understandable time is limited for a busy undergrad.
Good luck.

Re: A Go Survey for Statistics Class
Posted: Wed Oct 21, 2015 7:22 pm
by scapetude
DrStraw wrote:
Okay, as a college math professor who has regularly taught Introductory Statistics I have some questions for you.
You are asking here for a probably very small volunteer sample. Has your instructor told you about how unreliable volunteer samples are? And has he explained about how sample size severely affects the reliability of results. To produce anything of significance you need to have a sample size of around 35. Are you likely to get that from a posting here? Even if you do, it is a volunteer sample and so not reliable.
I am not criticizing you for trying to gather data. I am just pointing out that you need to be aware of the reliability of what you may gain from posting here. I hope you have other sources of data.
Thank you for your inputs. I am aware of the unreliability of convenience samples. I am not expecting a large sample size from a posting here, and will also get my data elsewhere. My instructor is also aware of how convenience samples will affect the project. Since he has approved it, I have decided to go forward with it. But, I am open to suggestions.
Re: A Go Survey for Statistics Class
Posted: Wed Oct 21, 2015 7:30 pm
by DrStraw
scapetude wrote:
Thank you for your inputs. I am aware of the unreliability of convenience samples. I am not expecting a large sample size from a posting here, and will also get my data elsewhere. My instructor is also aware of how convenience samples will affect the project. Since he has approved it, I have decided to go forward with it. But, I am open to suggestions.
If you are open to suggestions then I would suggest that you look at all the people who have posted here during that last week and directly PM them with the questions. This may seem like a small difference, but if you specifically target regular contributors you are much more likely to get a non-volunteer sample and also get more responses. You should, of course, explain the reasoning behind your request. It would also be a good idea to clear such a mass PM with the moderators here to make sure that it is within the TOS.
Just simply asking in an open forum is a notoriously bad way of gathering data. Those motivated to respond are more likely to be bias in some form or other.
Re: A Go Survey for Statistics Class
Posted: Wed Oct 21, 2015 7:33 pm
by scapetude
DrStraw wrote:
If you are open to suggestions then I would suggest that you look at all the people who have posted here during that last week and directly PM them with the questions. This may seem like a small difference, but if you specifically target regular contributors you are much more likely to get a non-volunteer sample and also get more responses. You should, of course, explain the reasoning behind your request. It would also be a good idea to clear such a mass PM with the moderators here to make sure that it is within the TOS.
Just simply asking in an open forum is a notoriously bad way of gathering data. Those motivated to respond are more likely to be bias in some form or other.
I haven't thought of it like that. Thank you for the suggestion.
Re: A Go Survey for Statistics Class
Posted: Wed Oct 21, 2015 10:55 pm
by Abyssinica
I was told you needed 30+ not 35, Drstraw.
Re: A Go Survey for Statistics Class
Posted: Thu Oct 22, 2015 12:15 am
by Uberdude
There is no magic number 30 or 35 that makes a good sample size. It depends on the population size, with what confidence you want the result, the type of question...
In what context were you taught/did you teach this magic number Abyssinica/DrStraw?
Re: A Go Survey for Statistics Class
Posted: Thu Oct 22, 2015 12:58 am
by wineandgolover
DrStraw wrote:I am a little skeptical when someone creates an account just to ask for personal data. I think some information about yourself and posting history is more appropriate.
My reservation is slightly different. It is highly unusual to ask people to post private information in a public forum, and I wouldn't comply with the request even if I were sympathetic, which I am. I'd strongly recommend using an online survey tool like
surveymonkey. This should:
1) keep your respondents' replies confidential,
2) increase your response rate, and
3) provide you the results in a spreadsheet-compatible format.
Please do not spam direct message frequent posters. So long as your teacher is aware of and approves sample shortcomings, you'll be cool. (Consider addressing them in your report.)
You could also consider offering to post the final results or report.
Good luck!