Thanks for that Saalem, I would have never figured it out without this explanation, easy to follow and worked a treat for the exact same situation I was facing with the dataset I was working on.
great but I saw many other graphs and they do not clearly divide it in 2.5 and 2.5, why do others divide it at 3.2, even 3.5??? what is the meaning behind the decision where to make one start and the other end?
The graph shown here is scale-centered. The other graphs you are referring to use mean centered values to plot the lines. This is useful for datasets that don't span the full range of the scale that you're using and all of the data points are only in the top right quadrant.
Hi thank you so much, this is super helpful! however I do have a question, how can we change the dot, to different shapes to represent each of the variables/points we raised on the graph? Thanks!
it is impossible, it means that you have values above the rating that you chose (1-5). If on a survey let's say, you can only select from 1 to 5, so impossible to have an average of 5.5, correct me if i'm wrong