Standard Deviation Is A Widely Used Measurement of Variability or Diversity Used in
Standard Deviation Is A Widely Used Measurement of Variability or Diversity Used in
Standard Deviation Is A Widely Used Measurement of Variability or Diversity Used in
statistik yang paling lazim. Singkatnya, ia mengukur bagaimana nilai-nilai data tersebar.
Simpangan baku didefinisikan sebagai akar kuadrat varians. Simpangan baku merupakan
bilangan tak-negatif, dan memiliki satuan yang sama dengan data. Misalnya jika suatu data
diukur dalam satuan meter, maka simpangan baku juga diukur dalam meter pula.
Istilah simpangan baku pertama kali diperkenakan oleh Karl Pearson pada tahun 1894, dalam
bukunya On the dissection of asymmetrical frequency curves.
Technically, the standard deviation of a statistical population, data set, or probability distribution
is the square root of its variance. It is algebraically simpler though practically less robust than the
average absolute deviation.[1][2] A useful property of standard deviation is that, unlike variance, it
is expressed in the same units as the data.
When only a sample of data from a population is available, the population standard deviation can
be estimated by a modified quantity called the sample standard deviation, explained below.
Contents
[hide]
1 Basic examples
2 Definition of population values
o 2.1 Discrete random variable
3 Estimation
o 3.1 With standard deviation of the sample
5.1.1 Climate
5.1.2 Sports
5.1.3 Finance
o 5.2 Geometric interpretation
9 History
10 See also
11 References
12 External links
Next compute the average of these values, and take the square root:
This quantity is the population standard deviation; it is equal to the square root of the variance.
The formula is valid only if the eight values we began with form the complete population. If they
instead were a random sample, drawn from some larger, “parent” population, then we should
have used 7 (which is n − 1) instead of 8 (which is n) in the denominator of the last formula, and
then the quantity thus obtained would have been called the sample standard deviation. See the
section Estimation below for more details.
A slightly more complicated real life example, the average height for adult men in the United
States is about 70", with a standard deviation of around 3". This means that most men (about
68%, assuming a normal distribution) have a height within 3" of the mean (67"–73") — one
standard deviation — and almost all men (about 95%) have a height within 6" of the mean (64"–
76") — two standard deviations. If the standard deviation were zero, then all men would be
exactly 70" tall. If the standard deviation were 20", then men would have much more variable
heights, with a typical range of about 50"–90". Three standard deviations account for 99.7% of
the sample population being studied, assuming the distribution is normal (bell-shaped).
Here the operator E denotes the average or expected value of X. Then the standard deviation of
X is the quantity
That is, the standard deviation σ (sigma) is the square root of the variance of X, i.e., it is the
square root of the average value of (X − μ)2.
The standard deviation of a (univariate) probability distribution is the same as that of a random
variable having that distribution. Not all random variables have a standard deviation, since these
expected values need not exist. For example, the standard deviation of a random variable that
follows a Cauchy distribution is undefined because its expected value μ is undefined.
In the case where X takes random values from a finite data set x1, x2, …, xN, with each value
having the same probability, the standard deviation is
If, instead of having equal probabilities, the values have different probabilities, let x1 have
probability p1, x2 have probability p2, ..., xN have probability pN. In this case, the standard
deviation will be
The standard deviation of a continuous real-valued random variable X with probability density
function p(x) is
and where the integrals are definite integrals taken for x ranging over the set of possible values of
the random variable X.
In the case of a parametric family of distributions, the standard deviation can be expressed in
terms of the parameters. For example, in the case of the log-normal distribution with parameters
μ and σ2, the standard deviation is [(exp(σ2) − 1)exp(2μ + σ2)]1/2.
[edit] Estimation
One can find the standard deviation of an entire population in cases (such as standardized
testing) where every member of a population is sampled. In cases where that cannot be done, the
standard deviation σ is estimated by examining a random sample taken from the population.
Some estimators are given below:
An estimator for σ sometimes used is the standard deviation of the sample, denoted by sN and
defined as follows:
This estimator has a uniformly smaller mean squared error than the sample standard deviation
(see below), and is the maximum-likelihood estimate when the population is normally
distributed. But this estimator, when applied to a small or moderately sized sample, tends to be
too low: it is a biased estimator.
The standard deviation of the sample is the same as the population standard deviation of a
discrete random variable that can assume precisely the values from the data set, where the
probability for each value is proportional to its multiplicity in the data set.
The most common estimator for σ used is an adjusted version, the sample standard deviation,
denoted by s and defined as follows:
where are the observed values of the sample items and is the mean value of these
observations. This correction (the use of N − 1 instead of N) is known as Bessel's correction. The
reason for this correction is that s2 is an unbiased estimator for the variance σ2 of the underlying
population, if that variance exists and the sample values are drawn independently with
replacement. However, s is not an unbiased estimator for the standard deviation σ; it tends to
overestimate the population standard deviation.
The term standard deviation of the sample is used for the uncorrected estimator (using N) while
the term sample standard deviation is used for the corrected estimator (using N − 1). The
denominator N − 1 is the number of degrees of freedom in the vector of residuals,
.
When all available values are used, it is called a population; when only a subset of available
values are used, it is called a sample.
Things to remember:
Although an unbiased estimator for σ is known when the random variable is normally
distributed, the formula is complicated and amounts to a minor correction. Moreover,
unbiasedness (in this sense of the word) is not always desirable.[citation needed]
The standard deviation of the sum of two random variables can be related to their individual
standard deviations and the covariance between them:
The calculation of the sum of squared deviations can be related to moments calculated directly
from the data. The standard deviation of the sample can be computed as:
The sample standard deviation can be computed as:
Thus, the standard deviation is equal to the square root of (the average of the squares less the
square of the average). See computational formula for the variance for a proof of this fact, and
for an analogous result for the sample standard deviation.
For example, each of the three populations {0, 0, 14, 14}, {0, 6, 8, 14} and {6, 6, 8, 8} has a
mean of 7. Their standard deviations are 7, 5, and 1, respectively. The third population has a
much smaller standard deviation than the other two because its values are all close to 7. In a
loose sense, the standard deviation tells us how far from the mean the data points tend to be. It
will have the same units as the data points themselves. If, for instance, the data set {0, 6, 8, 14}
represents the ages of a population of four siblings in years, the standard deviation is 5 years.
As another example, the population {1000, 1006, 1008, 1014} may represent the distances
traveled by four athletes, measured in meters. It has a mean of 1007 meters, and a standard
deviation of 5 meters.
Standard deviation may serve as a measure of uncertainty. In physical science, for example, the
reported standard deviation of a group of repeated measurements should give the precision of
those measurements. When deciding whether measurements agree with a theoretical prediction,
the standard deviation of those measurements is of crucial importance: if the mean of the
measurements is too far away from the prediction (with the distance measured in standard
deviations), then the theory being tested probably needs to be revised. This makes sense since
they fall outside the range of values that could reasonably be expected to occur if the prediction
were correct and the standard deviation appropriately quantified. See prediction interval.
The practical value of understanding the standard deviation of a set of values is in appreciating
how much variation there is from the "average" (mean).
[edit] Climate
As a simple example, consider the average daily maximum temperatures for two cities, one
inland and one on the coast. It is helpful to understand that the range of daily maximum
temperatures for cities near the coast is smaller than for cities inland. Thus, while these two cities
may each have the same average maximum temperature, the standard deviation of the daily
maximum temperature for the coastal city will be less than that of the inland city as, on any
particular day, the actual maximum temperature is more likely to be farther from the average
maximum temperature for the inland city than for the coastal one.
[edit] Sports
Another way of seeing it is to consider sports teams. In any set of categories, there will be teams
that rate highly at some things and poorly at others. Chances are, the teams that lead in the
standings will not show such disparity but will perform well in most categories. The lower the
standard deviation of their ratings in each category, the more balanced and consistent they will
tend to be. Whereas, teams with a higher standard deviation will be more unpredictable. For
example, a team that is consistently bad in most categories will have a low standard deviation. A
team that is consistently good in most categories will also have a low standard deviation.
However, a team with a high standard deviation might be the type of team that scores a lot
(strong offense) but also concedes a lot (weak defense), or, vice versa, that might have a poor
offense but compensates by being difficult to score on.
Trying to predict which teams, on any given day, will win, may include looking at the standard
deviations of the various team "stats" ratings, in which anomalies can match strengths vs.
weaknesses to attempt to understand what factors may prevail as stronger indicators of eventual
scoring outcomes.
In racing, a driver is timed on successive laps. A driver with a low standard deviation of lap
times is more consistent than a driver with a higher standard deviation. This information can be
used to help understand where opportunities might be found to reduce lap times.
[edit] Finance
In finance, standard deviation is a representation of the risk associated with a given security
(stocks, bonds, property, etc.), or the risk of a portfolio of securities (actively managed mutual
funds, index mutual funds, or ETFs). Risk is an important factor in determining how to
efficiently manage a portfolio of investments because it determines the variation in returns on the
asset and/or portfolio and gives investors a mathematical basis for investment decisions (known
as mean-variance optimization). The overall concept of risk is that as it increases, the expected
return on the asset will increase as a result of the risk premium earned – in other words, investors
should expect a higher return on an investment when said investment carries a higher level of
risk, or uncertainty of that return. When evaluating investments, investors should estimate both
the expected return and the uncertainty of future returns. Standard deviation provides a
quantified estimate of the uncertainty of future returns.
For example, let's assume an investor had to choose between two stocks. Stock A over the past
20 years had an average return of 10 percent, with a standard deviation of 20 percentage points
(pp) and Stock B, over the same period, had average returns of 12 percent but a higher standard
deviation of 30 pp. On the basis of risk and return, an investor may decide that Stock A is the
safer choice, because Stock B's additional two percentage points of return is not worth the
additional 10 pp standard deviation (greater risk or uncertainty of the expected return). Stock B is
likely to fall short of the initial investment (but also to exceed the initial investment) more often
than Stock A under the same circumstances, and is estimated to return only two percent more on
average. In this example, Stock A is expected to earn about 10 percent, plus or minus 20 pp (a
range of 30 percent to -10 percent), about two-thirds of the future year returns. When considering
more extreme possible returns or outcomes in future, an investor should expect results of as
much as 10 percent plus or minus 60 pp, or a range from 70 percent to −50 percent, which
includes outcomes for three standard deviations from the average return (about 99.7 percent of
probable returns).
Calculating the average (or arithmetic mean) of the return of a security over a given period will
generate the expected return of the asset. For each period, subtracting the expected return from
the actual return results in the difference from the mean. Squaring the difference in each period
and taking the average gives the overall variance of the return of the asset. The larger the
variance, the greater risk the security carries. Finding the square root of this variance will give
the standard deviation of the investment tool in question.
Population standard deviation is used to set the width of Bollinger Bands, a widely adopted
technical analysis tool. For example, the upper Bollinger Band is given as x + nσx. The most
commonly used value for n is 2; there is about a five percent chance of going outside, assuming a
normal distribution of returns.
To gain some geometric insights and clarification, we will start with a population of three values,
x1, x2, x3. This defines a point P = (x1, x2, x3) in R3. Consider the line L = {(r, r, r) : r ∈ R}. This is
the "main diagonal" going through the origin. If our three given values were all equal, then the
standard deviation would be zero and P would lie on L. So it is not unreasonable to assume that
the standard deviation is related to the distance of P to L. And that is indeed the case. To move
orthogonally from L to the point P, one begins at the point:
whose coordinates are the mean of the values we started out with. A little algebra shows that the
distance between P and M (which is the same as the orthogonal distance between P and the line
L) is equal to the standard deviation of the vector x1, x2, x3, multiplied by the square root of the
number of dimensions of the vector (3 in this case.)
Dark blue is less than one standard deviation from the mean. For the normal distribution, this
accounts for 68.27 percent of the set; while two standard deviations from the mean (medium and
dark blue) account for 95.45 percent; three standard deviations (light, medium, and dark blue)
account for 99.73 percent; and four standard deviations account for 99.994 percent. The two
points of the curve that are one standard deviation from the mean are also the inflection points.
The central limit theorem says that the distribution of an average of many independent,
identically distributed random variables tends toward the famous bell-shaped normal distribution
with a probability density function of:
where μ is the expected value of the random variables, σ equals their distribution's standard
deviation divided by n1/2, and n is the number of random variables. The standard deviation
therefore is simply a scaling variable that adjusts how broad the curve will be, though it also
appears in the normalizing constant.
If a data distribution is approximately normal then the proportion of data values within z standard
deviations of the mean is defined by:
Proportion =
where is the error function. If a data distribution is approximately normal then about 68
percent of the data values are within one standard deviation of the mean (mathematically, μ ± σ,
where μ is the arithmetic mean), about 95 percent are within two standard deviations (μ ± 2σ),
and about 99.7 percent lie within three standard deviations (μ ± 3σ). This is known as the 68-95-
99.7 rule, or the empirical rule.
For various values of z, the percentage of values expected to lie in and outside the symmetric
interval, CI = (−zσ, zσ), are as follows:
Using calculus or by completing the square, it is possible to show that σ(r) has a unique
minimum at the mean:
Variability can also be measured by the coefficient of variation, which is the ratio of the standard
deviation to the mean. It is a dimensionless number.
Often we want some information about the precision of the mean we obtained. We can obtain
this by determining the standard deviation of the sampled mean. The standard deviation of the
mean is related to the standard deviation of the distribution by:
where N is the number of observation in the sample used to estimate the mean. This can easily be
proven with:
hence
Resulting in:
The following two formulas can represent a running (continuous) standard deviation. A set of
three power sums s0, s1, s2 are each computed over a set of N values of x, denoted as x1, ..., xN:
Note that s0 raises x to the zero power, and since x0 is always 1, s0 evaluates to N.
Given the results of these three running summations, the values s0, s1, s2 can be used at any time
to compute the current value of the running standard deviation:
Sample variance:
Standard variance:
When the values xi are weighted with unequal weights wi, the power sums s0, s1, s2 are each
computed as:
And the standard deviation equations remain unchanged. Note that s0 is now the sum of the
weights and not the number of samples N.
The incremental method with reduced rounding errors can also be applied, with some additional
complexity.
and
where n is the total number of elements, and n' is the number of elements with non-zero weights.
The above formulas become equal to the simpler formulas given above if weights are taken as
equal to one.
The populations of sets, which may overlap, can be calculated simply as follows:
For the more general case of M non-overlapping populations, X1 through XM, and the aggregate
population :
where
If the size (actual or relative to one another), mean, and standard deviation of two overlapping
populations are known for the populations as well as their intersection, then the standard
deviation of the overall population can still be calculated as follows:
If two or more sets of data are being added together datapoint by datapoint, the standard
deviation of the result can be calculated if the standard deviation of each data set and the
covariance between each pair of data sets is known:
For the special case where no correlation exists between any pair of data sets, then the relation
reduces to the root-mean-square:
For the more general case of M non-overlapping data sets, X1 through XM, and the aggregate data
set :
where:
If the size, mean, and standard deviation of two overlapping samples are known for the samples
as well as their intersection, then the standard deviation of the aggregated sample can still be
calculated. In general: