Welcome Guest, you are in: Login

Public Comment Analysis Toolkit Help Wiki

RSS RSS

Navigation





Search the wiki
»

Assign users to a range of items

RSS
Home | Accounts | Credentials | Peers | Projects | Upload | De-duplicate | Cluster | Tag Clouds | View | Browse | Search | Buckets | Datasets | Assign | Notifications | Toolbox | Code | Bookmarks | Validate | Report | FAQ | Service Levels | Ideas for PCAT Improvements | PCAT Wiki ToDo List | Contact

Assign Users to a Range of Items

There are currently three major coding styles in PCAT. Use the “Assign Users to a Range of Items” style of coding when you want to split coding work across a group of annotators. In this style, you can still produce an overlap where two or more coders are coding some subset of the full dataset. This allows a team to share the work of coding a dataset while measuring reliability on a subset of the full dataset. We also support a standard coding style as well as the ability to have annotators code the next available item in a dataset.

Most Frequently Asked Questions

Why would I use this system? | Where do I get FDMS bulk downloads? | Does PCAT identify duplicates? | What is QDAP?

© 2009 - 2010 Qualitative Data Analysis Program (QDAP), in the University Center for Social and Urban Research, at the University of Pittsburgh, and QDAP-UMass, in the College of Social and Behavioral Sciences, at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. As of 2010, PCAT and this PCAT Help Wiki are maintained and improved by personnel from Texifter, LLC, which is a software start-up located in North Amherst & Springfield, MA and online at http://texifter.com/.

Content on this website was made possible with the following grants from the National Science Foundation: III-0705566 "Collaborative Research III-COR: From a Pile of Documents to a Collection of Information: A Framework for Multi-Dimensional Text Analysis" and IIS-0429293 "Collaborative Research: Language Processing Technology for Electronic Rulemaking." We are also grateful for financial support from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service. **Any opinions, findings and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the National Science Foundation.** == ==

Home | Accounts | Credentials | Peers | Projects | Upload | De-duplicate | Cluster | Tag Clouds | View | Browse | Search | Buckets | Datasets | Assign | Notifications | Toolbox | Code | Bookmarks | Validate | Report | FAQ | Service Levels | Ideas for PCAT Improvements | PCAT Wiki ToDo List | Contact