Measure of Central Tendency and Variability
Measure of Central Tendency and Variability
• Mean
• Median
• Mode
The Mode
5
Frequency
that occurs most 3
frequently in a set of
data 1
0
75 80 85 90 95
Score on Exam 1
Bimodal Distribution
5
Frequency
• When a distribution has 3
0
75 80 85 90 95
Score on Exam 1
Multimodal Distribution
5
Frequency
• If a distribution has more 3
than 2 “modes,” it is
called multimodal 1
0
75 80 85 90 95
Score on Exam 1
When to Use the Mode
6
tendency
• It is insensitive to large 2
0
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
mode
50
0
10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
The Median
N+1
Find the score in the middle,
• 2
• If N (the number of scores) is even the median
is the average of the middle two scores
Median Example
●What is the median of the following scores:
10 8 14 15 7 3 3 8 12 10 9
2 2
●Middle score = median = 9
!9
Median Example
●What is the median of the following scores: 24 18
19 42 16 12
N+1 6+1
Determine the middle score: middle = =
● 2 2
= 3.5
19 + 18
Median = average of the 3rd and 4th scores:
● 2
= 18.5
!10
When to use the Median
●The median is often used when the distribution
of scores is either positively or negatively
skewed and it will not overly influence the
median.
!11
The Mean
●The mean is the arithmetic average of all the
ΣX
scores ( )
!12
Calculating the Mean
●Calculate the mean of the following data:
1 5 4 3 2
● Mean: X = 3
!13
Rounding Off the Mean
When to use the Mean
●You should use the mean when
●If you change one score in the data set, the mean will
change
!15
Comparison of Measures of
Central Tendency
Measure Strengths Weaknesses
Mean •Unique – there’s exactly •Can be adversely affected
one mean for any data by one or two unusually
set high or low values
•Factors in all values in •Can be time-consuming to
the set calculate for large data sets
•Easy to understand
Median •Divides a data set neatly •Can ignore the effects of
into two groups large or small values even
•Not affected by one or if they are important to
two extreme values consider
Comparison of Measures of
Central Tendency
Measure Strengths Weaknesses
– the range
• Solution
In relative terms, the morning class has a small
standard deviation and the afternoon class has a
large one. So even though they have the same
mean, the classes are quite different. In the
morning class, most of the students probably
have scores relatively close to the mean, with few
very high or very low scores. In the afternoon
class, the scores vary more widely, with a lot of
high scores and a lot of low scores that average
out to a mean of 74%.
Coefficient of Variance
• Use to compare standard deviations when the
units are different
• Denoted by CVar
SD
• CVar= x100 %
M
Coefficient of Variance
• Example:
• PROBLEM:
• Solution
Normal Distributions
SOLUTION
(a) The mean is the value in the very center of a normal
distribution. This would be the highest point on the graph,
which is labeled 63.7. So the mean height for American
women is 63.7 inches.
(b) The diagram indicates that the area under the normal
graph between 57.4 and 59.1 is 0.034. This is the decimal
form of the percentage of data values that fall in that range.
Converting 0.034 to percent form by moving the decimal
point two places right, we get 3.4%. So we’d expect that
about 3.4% of women would have heights in that range.
Normal Distributions
SOLUTION
(c) In this case, the area under that portion of the
graph is 0.303, so we’d expect 30.3% of women to
have heights between 63.7 and 66.0 inches. In
particular, we’d expect 30.3% of the women at the
concert to have a height in that range 30.3 % of
31,806 = 0.303 × 31,806 = 9,637.218
EXAMPLE
According to the website answerbag.com, the
mean height for male humans is 5 feet 9.3 inches,
with a standard deviation of 2.8 inches. If this is
accurate, out of 1,000 randomly selected men,
how many would you expect to be between 5 feet
6.5 inches and 6 feet 0.1 inch?
Normal Distributions
SOLUTION
The given range of heights corresponds to those
within 1 standard deviation of the mean, so we
would expect about 68% of men to fall in that
range. In this case, we expect about 680 men to
be between 5 feet 6.5 inches and 6 feet 0.1 inch.
The Standard Normal Distribution
SOLUTION
Use the formula for z scores with mean 5 feet 9.3
inches and standard deviation 2.8 inches. Note that
we converted the heights to inches to make it easier
to subtract.
76in − 69.3in
z# = approx.2.39
2.8in
This means that 6′4″ is 2.39 standard deviations
above the mean.
Z Score
One year the ACT had a mean score of 21.2 and a standard
deviation of 5.1. That same year, the SAT had a mean score
of 1498 and a standard deviation of 347. Suppose that a
scholarship committee is considering two students, one who
scored 26 on the ACT and another who scored 1800 on the
SAT. Both are pretty good scores, but which one is better?
Z Score
Solution
26 − 21.2
26ACT
# :z= = 0.94
5.1
1800 − 1498
# 1800SAT :z= = 0.87
347
The student with 26 on the ACT did better. He/She is
0.94 standard deviations above the mean, while the
student who scored 1800 on the SAT is 0.87 standard
deviations above the mean.
Z Score and Area