Dear @statman
Sorry about the confusion.
Sample size of what? Is this a product or a web page or what? What is being sampled?
The dataset is a survey of 260 employees about their perceptions of three variables. So, n = 260. As I mentioned in the original post, these are within-individual perceptual measures. This is behavioral research using perceptual measures.
What are the independent variables? What is the response variable?
The independent variables are employees' perceptions of two competing factors regarding the organizational culture. The dependent variable is the employees' level of compliance with corporate policies. All three variables were measured the same seven-point, agree/disagree, Likert scale.
You apparently already did the "study"? Is there more than one person in the study? If so, you should have a column identifying the individual(s).
Yes. Originally, I analyzed the data using structural equation modeling and submitted the paper to a journal. The editor requested using polynomial surface analysis so that I can examine the actual (in)congruence between the two competing perceptions and they're joint relationship with the response (i.e., compliance level).
I'm confused the statement these are on a 1-7 scale. I assume you mean Ordinal scale. Likert is a specific type of ordinal scale (invented by Rensis Likert). It uses words like disagree, somewhat disagree, etc. about statements. Can you get more than one number for any measure of the sample?
Yes. I'm expected to treat the Likert scale measures as continuous variables. During the survey, a respondent was able to choose a number from 1 (strongly disagree) to 7 (strongly agree) for each of the three variables. For example, one employee could choose 3 for one independent variable, 4 for the other independent variable, and 5 for the response or dependent variable or could choose the same number for all three.
Hope it makes more sense now.