0% found this document useful (0 votes)
73 views24 pages

SD 04 Descriptive Statistics and Central Tendency

Central tendency refers to measures that describe the most typical or representative values in a data set. The three main measures of central tendency are the mode, median, and mean. The mode is the most frequently occurring value, the median is the middle value when data are arranged from lowest to highest, and the mean is the average and is calculated by summing all values and dividing by the total number of data points. Central tendency provides a simplified picture of where the center of a data distribution lies.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
73 views24 pages

SD 04 Descriptive Statistics and Central Tendency

Central tendency refers to measures that describe the most typical or representative values in a data set. The three main measures of central tendency are the mode, median, and mean. The mode is the most frequently occurring value, the median is the middle value when data are arranged from lowest to highest, and the mean is the average and is calculated by summing all values and dividing by the total number of data points. Central tendency provides a simplified picture of where the center of a data distribution lies.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 24

Descriptive

Statistics:
Central Tendency
Lesson 4
Psychology & Statistics
 Goals of Psychology
 Describe, predict, influence behavior

& cognitive processes


 Role of statistics
 Descriptive statistics

Describe, organize & summarize data


Efficient communication

 Inferential statistics
Draw conclusions about data
Aid decision making ~
Organizing Data
 Describing distribution of variables
 enumeration: list raw data

 Frequency distributions
 organize  tables or graphs

 highlight important characteristics

range, most frequent value ~


Distributions as Tables
 f = Frequency
 # of times a value of variable occurs

 Sf = n

 calculate proportions & percentages

 Frequency distribution tables


 ordered list of all values of variable &

their frequencies
 logical order (usually descending) ~
Enumeration Frequency
Distribution
# of presentations to be able to Table
recall 100%

8 12 18 15 10 X f
9 13 14 11 14 19 1
18 2
7 12 14 7 16
16 3
8 13 12 9 6 15 3
16 12 8 5 11 14 5
7 14 11 6 15 13 2
10 8 11 8 9 12 6
11 9 9 10 19 11 7
16 15 9 11 12 10 3
14 12 18 11 5 9 6
8 5
7 3
 Sf = n 6 2
5 2
 calculate proportions &
percentages 50
Grouped Frequency Distribution
 Group by class intervals
 report frequency for each interval

 Lose information: no exact values

 General rules
 each interval same width

 consecutive & do not overlap ~


Enumeration Frequency
Distribution
# of presentations to be able to Table
recall 100%

8 12 18 15 10 X f
9 13 14 11 14 19 1
18 2
7 12 14 7 16
16 3
8 13 12 9 6 15 3
16 12 8 5 11 14 5
7 14 11 6 15 13 2
10 8 11 8 9 12 6
11 9 9 10 19 11 7
16 15 9 11 12 10 3
14 12 18 11 5 9 6
8 5
7 3
 Sf = n 6 2
5 2
 calculate proportions &
percentages 50
Distributions as graphs
 Summarizes data
 focus on clear communication

 Bar Graphs
 nominal or ordinal data

 discrete variables

 Histograms & Frequency Polygons


 Interval/ratio data

continuous & discrete variables


 Relative frequency distributions
 Y axis = proportions

 Large data sets ~


Bar Graphs
Nominal Ordinal

18 18

14 14

10 10
f f
6 6

2 2

Rep Dem Ind A B C D F

Political affiliation Exam Grades


Histograms
 X-axis
 Class intervals
18
of variables
14
 Y-axis
10
f
 Frequencies 6
vertical bars ~ 2
5-6 7-8 9-10 11-12 13-14 15-16 17-18 19-20
5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21

# of presentations
Frequency polygons
 Frequency represented as points
 Contains same info as histogram ~

18 Relative Frequency

14

10
f f

5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21
# of presentations
# of presentations
Distributions: 3 useful features
 Summarizes important characteristics of
data

1. What is shape of the distribution?

2. Where is middle of distribution?

3. How wide is distribution?


Shapes of distributions
 Unimodal distribution
 single value is most f

frequent
X

 Bimodal (or multimodal )


 2 most frequently
f
occurring values
 May indicate relevant
X
subgroups ~
Symmetry of distributions
 Symmetric
 if right side mirror-
f
image of left
 Skewed - asymmetric
 a few extreme values

 Positively skewed:
f
right tail longer -4 -2 0 +2 +4
 Negatively skewed:
X
left tail longer ~
f

-4 -2 0 +2 +4
X
The Normal Distribution
 Bell-shaped
 3 characteristics
 Unimodal f
 symmetric

 asymptotic

 Many naturally-occurring variables


approximately normally distributed
 Makes statistics useful ~
Central Tendency
 Describes most typical values
 Depends on level of measurement

 Mode (all levels)


 Most frequently occurring value

 Median (only ordinal & interval/ratio)


 value where ½ observations above

& ½ below
 Mean (only interval/ratio)
 Arithmetic average ~
Mode
 Most frequently occurring value ~

18 18

14 14

10 f 10
f
6
6
2
2

A B C D F
Rep Dem Ind
exam grades
Political affiliation

18
18
14
14
f 10
f 10
6
6
2
2
5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21
5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21
# of presentations
# of presentations
Median
 Midpoint of a data set
 values ½ smaller, ½ larger ~

10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90
Finding the Median
1. List all values from largest  smallest
if f=3, then list 3 times

2. Odd # entries median = middle value

3. Even # entries = half way b/n middle 2


values ~
Mean
 Summarizes quantitative data
 May not be actual value in data set

 Introduces error

 Most commonly used

 Computing the mean


Sum of all observations
Mean =
Number of observations
Statistical Notation
 Formula for mean: X
N
 Σ: summate
 add all that follows

 X: observation
 value of an observation

 N: number of observations
 Or data points ~
Populations & Samples: Notation
 Different symbols
 Often different formulas for

calculation
 Population: Greek letters
 Population mean = μ

 Sample: Roman letters


 Sample mean = X
 APA style: M ~
Populations & Samples
 Population
 Parameter

 Exact value

 Population mean = μ

 Sample
 Statistic

 estimate of parameter

 introduces error

 Sample mean = X ~
Formulas for Mean
 Population mean
 Parameter   X
N

 Sample mean
 Statistic
X 
 X
 Estimate / error
 Sometimes n used for
N
sample ~

You might also like