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Textile

The document is a continuous assessment paper for a B. Tech. course in Textile Technology, focusing on applied statistics. It includes examples of cumulative frequency graphs and their uses, such as finding medians, quartiles, and visualizing data distribution. Additionally, it presents data on age groups and profits per shop, identifying the modal class for profits.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
2 views

Textile

The document is a continuous assessment paper for a B. Tech. course in Textile Technology, focusing on applied statistics. It includes examples of cumulative frequency graphs and their uses, such as finding medians, quartiles, and visualizing data distribution. Additionally, it presents data on age groups and profits per shop, identifying the modal class for profits.

Uploaded by

sukdebdas8805
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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GOVERNMENT COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING AND

TEXTILE TECHNOLOGY, SERAMPORE

CONTINUOUS ASSESSMENT-2
PAPER: Applied Statistics in Textile
PAPER CODE: PC-TT-501A
Submitted by
Name of the Student: Subhajit Das
Roll No: 11001422037
Course: B. Tech. in Textile Technology
Session: 2024-25
Q1.Example 4:13
Ans.
Q.2 Example 17
Ans.A cumulative frequency graph, also known as an ogive, is a graphical representation of the
cumulative frequency distribution of a dataset. In this graph, the cumulative frequencies are
plotted on the y-axis, and the corresponding data values (often intervals or class boundaries) are
plotted on the x-axis.
The uses are:
•Finding the Median: The graph can help estimate the median of a dataset. The median is the
value at the 50% cumulative frequency point.
•Determining Quartiles and Percentiles: The graph can be used to estimate the quartiles (Q1, Q3)
and any percentile (e.g., 25th percentile, 90th percentile) by reading off the values where the
cumulative frequency reaches specific proportions of the total.
•Visualizing Data Distribution: The graph provides a quick visual indication of how data
accumulates and can reveal skewness or gaps in the data distribution.
•Comparing Datasets: When two cumulative frequency graphs are overlaid, it is possible to
compare distributions and see which dataset tends to have higher or lower values.

Age Group No.of Persons


20-25 50
25-30 70
30-35 100
35-40 180
40-45 150
45-50 120
50-55 70
55-60 59

Q3.Example 5:59
Ans:
Profits per shop(Rs.) No .of shops
0-100 12
100-200 18
200-300 27
300-400 20
400-500 17
500-600 6
The modal value is between profit range 200-300 (27 shops)
and the modal class is 200-300

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