Puneet Varma (Editor)

Colectica

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Developer(s)
  
Colectica

Written in
  
C#, java

Development status
  
Active

Initial release
  
January 6, 2010 (2010-01-06)

Stable release
  
5.2.5387 / November 25, 2015; 14 months ago (2015-11-25)

Preview release
  
5.2.5776 / August 30, 2016; 5 months ago (2016-08-30)

Colectica is a suite of programs for use in managing official statistics and statistical surveys using open standards that enable researchers, archivists, and programmers to perform:

  • questionnaire design
  • automatic programming for computer-assisted telephone interviewing systems
  • data entry, retrieval, and management
  • statistical analysis
  • microdata documentation and management
  • applications development
  • data warehousing
  • metadata standards creation such as Data Documentation Initiative
  • Colectica is currently in use by a variety of University survey research groups, Longitudinal Studies, National Statistics Offices, Data archives, and commercial survey research organizations.

    History

    Colectica was originally funded in part by the NIH National Institute on Aging to explore automatic documentation of computer assisted surveys. This grant saw the creation of metadata extraction and flowchart creation tools for CASES, Blaise, and CSPro survey instrument source code. The grant also partially funded the creation of a questionnaire specification content area in the Data Documentation Initiative's DDI Lifecycle metadata standard. The functionality of these tools, originally named SurveyViz, is now bundled with the Colectica Designer and based on the DDI standard.

    The NIH funds many long running longitudinal studies that have collected vast amounts of data, which due to their design require detailed documentation and organization. In 2011, the NIH National Institute on Aging provided further funding to add longitudinal data management functionality to Colectica to enable documenting the complex study designs.

    References

    Colectica Wikipedia