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Section 2.4 notes Measures of Center
Statistics Section 2.4 notes Measures of Center
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A measure of center is a value at the center or middle of a data set.
The mean of a set of values is obtained by adding the values and dividing by the total number of values.
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Sample size – the number of values in the data set, denoted by lower case n.
The median of a data set is the middle value when the original data values are arranged in ascending (or descending) order.
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Odd number of values – median is the number in the exact middle.
Even number of values – median is the average (mean) of the two middle numbers.
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The mode of a data set is the value that occurs most frequently, denoted by M.
bimodal – data set has two modes multimodal – data set has more than two modes A data set can also have no mode.
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The midrange is the value that is halfway between the highest and lowest values in the data set. It is found by adding the highest + lowest and then dividing by 2. Round-off Rule – Go one more decimal place than the values in the original set of data.
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Example: 18, 16, 23, 25, 19, 18, 20, 38 mean = 177/8 = round to 22.1 median = 16, 18, 18, 19, 20, 23, 25, 38 19+20 = 39/2 = 19.5 mode = 18 midrange = = 54/2 = 27
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mean always yes median no mode rarely used How common? Existence
Takes every value into account Affected by extreme values Advantage/ Disadvantage mean most familiar always yes used often/affected by extremes median commonly used no good choice if there are extreme values mode Sometimes used might not exist; could be more than one frequently used for qualitative data midrange rarely used not common; sensitive to extremes
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