Measure of Central Tendency
Measure of Central Tendency
Tendency
Introduction:
In statistics, a central tendency is a central value or a
typical value for a probability distribution.
It is occasionally called an average or just the center
of the distribution.
The most common measures of central tendency are
the arithmetic mean, the median and the mode.
Measures of central tendency are defined for a
population(large set of objects of a similar nature) and
for a sample (portion of the elements of a population).
Some Definitions
Simpson and Kafka defined it as A measure of central
tendency is a typical value around which other figures
gather
Waugh has expressed An average stand for the whole
group of which it forms a part yet represents the whole.
In laymans term, a measure of central tendency is an
AVERAGE. It is a single number of value which can be
considered typical in a set of data as a whole.
Mean
Direct Method :
Example Of A.M:
A sample of five executives received the
following bonus last year ($000):
14.0, 15.0, 17.0, 16.0, 15.0
Solution:
Weighted Mean
Weighted mean is the mean of a set of values wherein
each value or measurement has a different weight or
degree of importance. The following is its formula:
where
= mean
x = measurement or value
w = number of measurements
Example Of W.M
Below are Amayas subjects and the corresponding number of units
and grades she got for the previous grading period. Compute her
grade point average.
=
= 86.1
Amayas average grade is 86.1
Harmonic Mean
0.0758
14.2
0.0704
14.8
0.0676
15.2
0.0658
16.1
0.0621
Total
0.3147
Solution: Now
Well find H.M as:
11
20
32
25
Marks
30-39
34.5
0.0580
40-49
44.5
0.0674
50-59
54.5
11
0.2018
60-69
64.5
20
0.3101
70-79
74.5
32
0.4295
80-89
84.5
25
0.2959
90-99
94.5
0.0741
Total
=1.4368
Geometric Mean
The geometric mean is well defined only for sets of positive real
numbers. This is calculated by multiplying all the numbers (call the
number of numbers n), and taking the nth root of the total.
Formulas
For grouped data:
G=Anti
For Grouped data:
G=anti
Log x
15
1.1761
12
1.0792
G=Anti
13
1.1139
G=Anti(1.129)
19
1.2788
10
1.0000
Total
5.648
G=13.48
MEDIAN
Median
The MEDIAN, denoted Md, is the middle value of the sample when the
data are ranked in order according to size.
Connor has defined as The median is that value of the variable which
divides the group into two equal parts, one part comprising of all values
greater, and the other, all values less than median
For Ungrouped data median is calculated as:
Example OF Median
The ages for a sample of five college students are:
21, 25, 19, 20, 22
Solution:
Arranging the data in ascending order gives:
19, 20, 21, 22, 25.
Here n=5
As median= ()th value
Md=()th value
=()th value
=3rd value
Thus the median is 21.
Solution :
As median= L +
n=50; h=5 ;L=14.5
f=17 and c=24
so
Median =14.5+
=14.94
Mode
Formula:
For Grouped Data:
Mode= L+*h
Frequency
1-3
4-6
7-9
10 - 12
13 - 15
16 - 18
19 - 21
22 - 24
25 - 27
28 - 30
Solution:
Here model class=10-12
L = 10, fn= 9, f1 = 4, f2 = 2, h = 3
Mode=L+*h
=10+
=10+
=10+1.25
Mode=11.25
Advantages of Mode :
Disadvantages of Mode :
Advantages of Median:
Disadvantages of Median:
Properties of mode
It is used when you want to find the value which occurs
most often.
It is a quick approximation of the average.
It is an inspection average.
It is the most unreliable among the three measures of central
tendency because its value is undefined in some
observations.
Properties of Mean
1.
2.
Mean can be calculated for any set of numerical data, so it always exists.
A set of numerical data has one and only one mean.
3.
Mean is the most reliable measure of central tendency since it takes into
account every item in the set of data.
It is greatly affected by extreme or deviant values (outliers)
It is used only if the data are interval or ratio.
4.
5.
In negatively skewed
distributions, the mean is
smaller than the median
Conclusion
Thank You