Is there a simple word for “increasingly/decreasingly frequent”?





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Let's say I'm creating a mobile questionnaire for people in which I ask about their usage patterns of some tool. The user can specify a period of time in which they used a tool, so perhaps between February and March they started to use a hammer, and as they got more confident with it, they ended up using it more and more frequently, then between March and today they used it every day.



I want to represent those choices with a nice label off to the left, and a SegmentedControl to the right, as there are only three options.



My problem is I can't come up with descriptions more concise than "increasingly often", "even throughout" and "decreasingly often", and so I come here to find out the obvious thing I've forgotten.



(I of course can rearrange the layout so the label is on top, or switch to a different input method, but I'd prefer to change the words if possible).










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  • There is always "more often", "less often", and "equally often".

    – Steve
    May 24 at 17:53











  • That sounds like a comparison between two points, though, "I used a hammer more often than I used a GAU-8 Avenger", for instance. In my case, I want to specify "I used a hammer more often as time went on".

    – Adam Barnes
    May 24 at 19:19











  • I don't know about that. If the dentist tells you "brush your teeth more often", he means "...than before", not "...than John Smith", nor "...than your hair".

    – Steve
    May 24 at 20:51











  • Exactly. Before, I brushed once per month. He wants me to brush daily. He doesn't want me to gradually ramp up to brushing daily over time, by starting out brushing twice a month, then three times, etc.

    – Adam Barnes
    May 25 at 23:33


















0















Let's say I'm creating a mobile questionnaire for people in which I ask about their usage patterns of some tool. The user can specify a period of time in which they used a tool, so perhaps between February and March they started to use a hammer, and as they got more confident with it, they ended up using it more and more frequently, then between March and today they used it every day.



I want to represent those choices with a nice label off to the left, and a SegmentedControl to the right, as there are only three options.



My problem is I can't come up with descriptions more concise than "increasingly often", "even throughout" and "decreasingly often", and so I come here to find out the obvious thing I've forgotten.



(I of course can rearrange the layout so the label is on top, or switch to a different input method, but I'd prefer to change the words if possible).










share|improve this question

























  • There is always "more often", "less often", and "equally often".

    – Steve
    May 24 at 17:53











  • That sounds like a comparison between two points, though, "I used a hammer more often than I used a GAU-8 Avenger", for instance. In my case, I want to specify "I used a hammer more often as time went on".

    – Adam Barnes
    May 24 at 19:19











  • I don't know about that. If the dentist tells you "brush your teeth more often", he means "...than before", not "...than John Smith", nor "...than your hair".

    – Steve
    May 24 at 20:51











  • Exactly. Before, I brushed once per month. He wants me to brush daily. He doesn't want me to gradually ramp up to brushing daily over time, by starting out brushing twice a month, then three times, etc.

    – Adam Barnes
    May 25 at 23:33














0












0








0








Let's say I'm creating a mobile questionnaire for people in which I ask about their usage patterns of some tool. The user can specify a period of time in which they used a tool, so perhaps between February and March they started to use a hammer, and as they got more confident with it, they ended up using it more and more frequently, then between March and today they used it every day.



I want to represent those choices with a nice label off to the left, and a SegmentedControl to the right, as there are only three options.



My problem is I can't come up with descriptions more concise than "increasingly often", "even throughout" and "decreasingly often", and so I come here to find out the obvious thing I've forgotten.



(I of course can rearrange the layout so the label is on top, or switch to a different input method, but I'd prefer to change the words if possible).










share|improve this question














Let's say I'm creating a mobile questionnaire for people in which I ask about their usage patterns of some tool. The user can specify a period of time in which they used a tool, so perhaps between February and March they started to use a hammer, and as they got more confident with it, they ended up using it more and more frequently, then between March and today they used it every day.



I want to represent those choices with a nice label off to the left, and a SegmentedControl to the right, as there are only three options.



My problem is I can't come up with descriptions more concise than "increasingly often", "even throughout" and "decreasingly often", and so I come here to find out the obvious thing I've forgotten.



(I of course can rearrange the layout so the label is on top, or switch to a different input method, but I'd prefer to change the words if possible).







synonyms recurring-events






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asked May 24 at 16:38









Adam BarnesAdam Barnes

3282 silver badges8 bronze badges




3282 silver badges8 bronze badges
















  • There is always "more often", "less often", and "equally often".

    – Steve
    May 24 at 17:53











  • That sounds like a comparison between two points, though, "I used a hammer more often than I used a GAU-8 Avenger", for instance. In my case, I want to specify "I used a hammer more often as time went on".

    – Adam Barnes
    May 24 at 19:19











  • I don't know about that. If the dentist tells you "brush your teeth more often", he means "...than before", not "...than John Smith", nor "...than your hair".

    – Steve
    May 24 at 20:51











  • Exactly. Before, I brushed once per month. He wants me to brush daily. He doesn't want me to gradually ramp up to brushing daily over time, by starting out brushing twice a month, then three times, etc.

    – Adam Barnes
    May 25 at 23:33



















  • There is always "more often", "less often", and "equally often".

    – Steve
    May 24 at 17:53











  • That sounds like a comparison between two points, though, "I used a hammer more often than I used a GAU-8 Avenger", for instance. In my case, I want to specify "I used a hammer more often as time went on".

    – Adam Barnes
    May 24 at 19:19











  • I don't know about that. If the dentist tells you "brush your teeth more often", he means "...than before", not "...than John Smith", nor "...than your hair".

    – Steve
    May 24 at 20:51











  • Exactly. Before, I brushed once per month. He wants me to brush daily. He doesn't want me to gradually ramp up to brushing daily over time, by starting out brushing twice a month, then three times, etc.

    – Adam Barnes
    May 25 at 23:33

















There is always "more often", "less often", and "equally often".

– Steve
May 24 at 17:53





There is always "more often", "less often", and "equally often".

– Steve
May 24 at 17:53













That sounds like a comparison between two points, though, "I used a hammer more often than I used a GAU-8 Avenger", for instance. In my case, I want to specify "I used a hammer more often as time went on".

– Adam Barnes
May 24 at 19:19





That sounds like a comparison between two points, though, "I used a hammer more often than I used a GAU-8 Avenger", for instance. In my case, I want to specify "I used a hammer more often as time went on".

– Adam Barnes
May 24 at 19:19













I don't know about that. If the dentist tells you "brush your teeth more often", he means "...than before", not "...than John Smith", nor "...than your hair".

– Steve
May 24 at 20:51





I don't know about that. If the dentist tells you "brush your teeth more often", he means "...than before", not "...than John Smith", nor "...than your hair".

– Steve
May 24 at 20:51













Exactly. Before, I brushed once per month. He wants me to brush daily. He doesn't want me to gradually ramp up to brushing daily over time, by starting out brushing twice a month, then three times, etc.

– Adam Barnes
May 25 at 23:33





Exactly. Before, I brushed once per month. He wants me to brush daily. He doesn't want me to gradually ramp up to brushing daily over time, by starting out brushing twice a month, then three times, etc.

– Adam Barnes
May 25 at 23:33










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Ah, I think I understand what sense you mean it in now @AdamBarnes.



Not just more often, but an accelerating increase in frequency ("increasingly more often") - a property of what I believe mathematicians would call the 2nd derivative.



I have to say the prospect of reducing this concept to a single word is implausible.



Your use of "even throughout" is also misleading - does that mean at an evenly increasing frequency, or at an even frequency? Once you introduce a 2nd derivative, there are more than 3 possible qualitative descriptions of the frequency profile. An increase can be accelerating, decelerating, or steady. A decrease can be accelerating, decelerating, or steady. And then there is a steady frequency throughout. 7 in total (if my own reasoning is sound).



You could thus have states like "decreasingly more often" - that is, always more often, but at a slowing rate of increase each time. And "decreasingly less often", that is always less often over time, but at a slowing rate of decrease over time. Whereas "increasingly less often" means the same as "less and less over time". I'm giddy at the thought of a user trying to interpret this correctly.



To express this in natural language to an untrained person, I would think paragraphs or even pages with diagrams would be required to explain, never mind one word.



You would not normally present users with such questions - from a statistics point of view you'd almost certainly get junk answers or no response at all.



Instead, ask them to state how often they have used the thing at different points in time. Once you have that, you can infer the derivatives of those figures yourself.






share|improve this answer


























  • Yeah that's making a lot of sense, thank you.

    – Adam Barnes
    May 28 at 12:48














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Ah, I think I understand what sense you mean it in now @AdamBarnes.



Not just more often, but an accelerating increase in frequency ("increasingly more often") - a property of what I believe mathematicians would call the 2nd derivative.



I have to say the prospect of reducing this concept to a single word is implausible.



Your use of "even throughout" is also misleading - does that mean at an evenly increasing frequency, or at an even frequency? Once you introduce a 2nd derivative, there are more than 3 possible qualitative descriptions of the frequency profile. An increase can be accelerating, decelerating, or steady. A decrease can be accelerating, decelerating, or steady. And then there is a steady frequency throughout. 7 in total (if my own reasoning is sound).



You could thus have states like "decreasingly more often" - that is, always more often, but at a slowing rate of increase each time. And "decreasingly less often", that is always less often over time, but at a slowing rate of decrease over time. Whereas "increasingly less often" means the same as "less and less over time". I'm giddy at the thought of a user trying to interpret this correctly.



To express this in natural language to an untrained person, I would think paragraphs or even pages with diagrams would be required to explain, never mind one word.



You would not normally present users with such questions - from a statistics point of view you'd almost certainly get junk answers or no response at all.



Instead, ask them to state how often they have used the thing at different points in time. Once you have that, you can infer the derivatives of those figures yourself.






share|improve this answer


























  • Yeah that's making a lot of sense, thank you.

    – Adam Barnes
    May 28 at 12:48
















1














Ah, I think I understand what sense you mean it in now @AdamBarnes.



Not just more often, but an accelerating increase in frequency ("increasingly more often") - a property of what I believe mathematicians would call the 2nd derivative.



I have to say the prospect of reducing this concept to a single word is implausible.



Your use of "even throughout" is also misleading - does that mean at an evenly increasing frequency, or at an even frequency? Once you introduce a 2nd derivative, there are more than 3 possible qualitative descriptions of the frequency profile. An increase can be accelerating, decelerating, or steady. A decrease can be accelerating, decelerating, or steady. And then there is a steady frequency throughout. 7 in total (if my own reasoning is sound).



You could thus have states like "decreasingly more often" - that is, always more often, but at a slowing rate of increase each time. And "decreasingly less often", that is always less often over time, but at a slowing rate of decrease over time. Whereas "increasingly less often" means the same as "less and less over time". I'm giddy at the thought of a user trying to interpret this correctly.



To express this in natural language to an untrained person, I would think paragraphs or even pages with diagrams would be required to explain, never mind one word.



You would not normally present users with such questions - from a statistics point of view you'd almost certainly get junk answers or no response at all.



Instead, ask them to state how often they have used the thing at different points in time. Once you have that, you can infer the derivatives of those figures yourself.






share|improve this answer


























  • Yeah that's making a lot of sense, thank you.

    – Adam Barnes
    May 28 at 12:48














1












1








1







Ah, I think I understand what sense you mean it in now @AdamBarnes.



Not just more often, but an accelerating increase in frequency ("increasingly more often") - a property of what I believe mathematicians would call the 2nd derivative.



I have to say the prospect of reducing this concept to a single word is implausible.



Your use of "even throughout" is also misleading - does that mean at an evenly increasing frequency, or at an even frequency? Once you introduce a 2nd derivative, there are more than 3 possible qualitative descriptions of the frequency profile. An increase can be accelerating, decelerating, or steady. A decrease can be accelerating, decelerating, or steady. And then there is a steady frequency throughout. 7 in total (if my own reasoning is sound).



You could thus have states like "decreasingly more often" - that is, always more often, but at a slowing rate of increase each time. And "decreasingly less often", that is always less often over time, but at a slowing rate of decrease over time. Whereas "increasingly less often" means the same as "less and less over time". I'm giddy at the thought of a user trying to interpret this correctly.



To express this in natural language to an untrained person, I would think paragraphs or even pages with diagrams would be required to explain, never mind one word.



You would not normally present users with such questions - from a statistics point of view you'd almost certainly get junk answers or no response at all.



Instead, ask them to state how often they have used the thing at different points in time. Once you have that, you can infer the derivatives of those figures yourself.






share|improve this answer













Ah, I think I understand what sense you mean it in now @AdamBarnes.



Not just more often, but an accelerating increase in frequency ("increasingly more often") - a property of what I believe mathematicians would call the 2nd derivative.



I have to say the prospect of reducing this concept to a single word is implausible.



Your use of "even throughout" is also misleading - does that mean at an evenly increasing frequency, or at an even frequency? Once you introduce a 2nd derivative, there are more than 3 possible qualitative descriptions of the frequency profile. An increase can be accelerating, decelerating, or steady. A decrease can be accelerating, decelerating, or steady. And then there is a steady frequency throughout. 7 in total (if my own reasoning is sound).



You could thus have states like "decreasingly more often" - that is, always more often, but at a slowing rate of increase each time. And "decreasingly less often", that is always less often over time, but at a slowing rate of decrease over time. Whereas "increasingly less often" means the same as "less and less over time". I'm giddy at the thought of a user trying to interpret this correctly.



To express this in natural language to an untrained person, I would think paragraphs or even pages with diagrams would be required to explain, never mind one word.



You would not normally present users with such questions - from a statistics point of view you'd almost certainly get junk answers or no response at all.



Instead, ask them to state how often they have used the thing at different points in time. Once you have that, you can infer the derivatives of those figures yourself.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered May 26 at 0:25









SteveSteve

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  • Yeah that's making a lot of sense, thank you.

    – Adam Barnes
    May 28 at 12:48



















  • Yeah that's making a lot of sense, thank you.

    – Adam Barnes
    May 28 at 12:48

















Yeah that's making a lot of sense, thank you.

– Adam Barnes
May 28 at 12:48





Yeah that's making a lot of sense, thank you.

– Adam Barnes
May 28 at 12:48


















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