Jasp Mac Download

Welcome to the JASP Tutorial section. Below you can find all the analyses and functions available in JASP, accompanied by explanatory media like blog posts, videos and animated GIF-files.

Jasp Mac Download Full

  1. Jasc Paint Shop Pro free download - Paint Shop Deluxe, Corel PaintShop Pro, The Print Shop Deluxe, and many more programs.
  2. JASP can open the following file types.csv,.tsv, and.txt (any text files with comma/semicolon/colon/tab separated columns).sav and.por (SPSS files).sas7bdat (SAS files).ods (Open Document Spreadsheet.

Email: info@jasp-stats.org NB. For feature requests, for help installing JASP, or for bug reports: please post your issue on our GitHub page so the JASP team can assist you efficiently (for details see this.

Click on the JASP-logo to go to a blog post, on the play-button to go to the video on Youtube, or the GIF-button to go to the animated GIF-file. We’re working hard to complete this list of tutorials. To request a tutorial for a specific analysis procedure, please send an email to info@jasp-stats.org and we will prioritize accordingly.

NB. For feature requests, for help installing JASP, or for bug reports: please post your issue on our GitHub page so the JASP team can assist you efficiently (for details see this blog post).


Frequentist Analyses

Blog PostVideoGIF
ANCOVA
ANOVA
Binomial Test
Confirmatory Factor Analysis
Contingency Tables
Correlation
Descriptive Statistics
Exploratory Factor Analysis
Generalized Linear Mixed Models
Hierarchical Regression
Independent Samples T-Test
Linear Mixed Models
Linear Regression
Logistic Regression
Log-Linear Regression
MANOVA
Mediation Analysis
Multinomial Test and Chi-Square Test
Nonparametric tests
One Sample T-Test
Paired Samples T-Test
Principal Component Analysis
Repeated Measures ANOVA
Selection Models
Structural Equation Modeling


Bayesian Analyses

Blog PostVideoGIF
A/B Test
ANCOVA
ANOVA
Binomial Test
Contingency Tables
Correlation
Generalized Linear Mixed Models
Independent Samples T-Test
Linear Mixed Models
Linear Regression
Log-Linear Regression
Multinomial Test
One Sample T-Test
Paired Samples T-Test
Repeated Measures ANOVA
Robust Bayesian Meta-Analysis


Jasp

Jasp Mac Download Windows 10

Modules

Blog PostVideoGIF
Audit
Bain
Distributions
Equivalence T-Tests (Beta)
JAGS
Learn Bayes
Machine Learning
Meta-Analysis
Network
R (Beta)
Reliability
Structural Equation Modeling (SEM)
Summary Stats
Visual Modeling (Beta)
Download


Functions

Blog PostVideoGIF
Compute Columns
Data & Label Editing
Exact P-Values
Filtering
OSF support
Test Interval-Null Hypotheses
VS-MPR


Tips & Tricks

Below you can find a list of small features as well as tips and tricks in JASP, explained with a simple animated GIF or video. Click on the icon to get to the file.

How to…
Add a new module
Add confidence intervals for effect sizes
Arrange analyses in desired order
Change a variable type
Change the default language
Cite and reference in APA Style
Copy tables directly into your word processor
Copy tables in LaTeX format
Export results to HTML
Load a data set from the JASP Data Library
Make your plots have a transparent / white background
Resize the data view
Save plots as images
Save plots as PowerPoint file (.pptx)
Search for variables by typing the variable name
Select dark theme
Tell JASP which values in your dataset are NA values
View a help file
Write annotations in the output

Note: this review concerns an older version (0.92) — JASP is now up to 0.10.2 and has added numerous analyses.

JASP was created as “a low fat alternative to SPSS, a delicious alternative to R,” and comes out of the University of Amsterdam (presumably at lower cost than buying SPSS).

JASP is not yet at version 1 and may be used with caution; it also requires the free XQuartz window environment. Though it’s not a native Mac program, it does use the native open/save dialogue box, surprisingly; and it’s easy to install, unlike, say, PSPP.

The software looks and feels like SPSS; though it isn’t native Mac software, it feels more native than some of SPSS’ past versions. Calculations and screen drawing are far, far, far faster than in “real SPSS” — when you select the tests, they might actually be pumped out before your finger is fully off the mouse.

Jasp Mac Download

We loaded our big test file instantly — and ran descriptives instantly. When it could not finish one process in a reasonable time, we ran others, indicating it’s well multi-threaded. The survey file also loaded in a fraction of a second; frequencies for all 40 five-point variables came in the blink of an eye.

Survey researchers will be happy to know they can assign value labels — and unhappy to know they must be done variable by variable, without syntax. The labels are retroactively applied to whatever is in the output window, very rapidly.

There is a copy function for either individual charts or whole analyses, but when we tried, it didn’t work — until I tried pasting into Pages and Word (it looks much better in Pages). Copying worked just fine for graphics, and there’s also an easy graphics export.

What’s missing in JASP? There are still many procedures to be written, but the biggest user-interface gaps from “actual SPSS” are in the lack of syntax or macros, and the lack of customizability for charts. There do not seem to be plans for syntax. There's also no way to change data in the spreadsheet view, but this may not be a big problem; and, while you can use long variable names (with spaces), you can't do variable labels.

Thanks to Prof. Kim-Oliver Tietze for pointing us to JASP.

JASP project/download page • Other free Mac statistics packages • PAST • Jamovi

Unsigned software

The developers do not pay Apple $99 per year for an account, so they are not “signed” by Apple. You can’t open this software by double-clicking; instead, right-click (on one-button mice, hold down the control button while clicking), and select Open from the contextual menu. You will get the scary dialogue box; fill it out if you want to run the software. The system should remember your choice and should not ask you again unless you update the software, and you can double-click to run from here on.

If you don’t even get that far, go to your System Preferences, click on Security & Privacy (first row, looks like a house), go to the General tab, unlock the preference (click on the lock, bottom left), and then select “Allow apps downloaded from App Store and identified developers.” This, again, only has to be done once.

Books by MacStats maintainer David Zatz• MacStats created in 1996 by Dr. Joel West; edited since 2005 by Dr. David Zatz of Toolpack Consulting. Copyright © 2005-2021 Zatz LLC. All rights reserved. Contact us.