Describing Data:: Frequency Tables, Frequency Distributions, and Graphic Presentation
Describing Data:: Frequency Tables, Frequency Distributions, and Graphic Presentation
Lectures 5 & 6
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
GOALS
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Pie Charts and Bar Charts
PIE CHART A chart that shows the proportion or percent that each class
represents of the total number of frequencies .
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EXAMPLE – Creating a Frequency
Distribution Table
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Frequency Table and Frequency Distribution
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Constructing a Frequency Table -
Example
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Constructing a Frequency Table - Example
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Relative Frequency Distribution
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Graphic Presentation of a Frequency
Distribution
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Histogram
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Histogram Using Excel
13
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Frequency Polygon
A frequency polygon
also shows the shape
of a distribution and is
similar to a histogram.
It consists of line
segments connecting
the points formed by
the intersections of the
class midpoints and the
class frequencies.
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Histogram Versus Frequency Polygon
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Cumulative Frequency Distribution
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Dot Plots
A dot plot groups the data as little as possible and the identity of an individual observation is not lost.
To develop a dot plot, each observation is simply displayed as a dot along a horizontal number line
indicating the possible values of the data.
If there are identical observations or the observations are too close to be shown individually, the dots are
“piled” on top of each other.
EXAMPLE
Reported below are the number of vehicles sold in the last 24 months at Smith Ford Mercury Jeep, Inc.,
in Kane, Pennsylvania, and Brophy Honda Volkswagen in Greenville, Ohio. Construct dot plots
and report summary statistics for the two small-town Auto USA lots.
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Dot Plots
A dot plot groups the data as little as possible and the identity of an individual observation is not lost.
To develop a dot plot, each observation is simply displayed as a dot along a horizontal number line
indicating the possible values of the data.
If there are identical observations or the observations are too close to be shown individually, the dots are
“piled” on top of each other.
EXAMPLE
Reported below are the number of vehicles sold in the last 24 months at Smith Ford Mercury Jeep, Inc.,
in Kane, Pennsylvania, and Brophy Honda Volkswagen in Greenville, Ohio. Construct dot plots
and report summary statistics for the two small-town Auto USA lots.
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Stem-and-Leaf
Stem-and-leaf display is a statistical technique to present a set of data. Each numerical value is divided
into two parts. The leading digit(s) becomes the stem and the trailing digit the leaf. The stems are located
along the vertical axis, and the leaf values are stacked against each other along the horizontal axis.
Two disadvantages to organizing the data into a frequency distribution:
(1) The exact identity of each value is lost
(2) Difficult to tell how the values within each class are distributed.
EXAMPLE
Listed in Table 4–1 is the number of 30-second radio advertising spots purchased by each of the 45
members of the Greater Buffalo Automobile Dealers Association last year. Organize the data into a
stem-and-leaf display. Around what values do the number of advertising spots tend to cluster?
What is the fewest number of spots purchased by a dealer? The largest number purchased?
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Boxplot - Example
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Boxplot - Example
Step1: Create an appropriate scale along the horizontal axis.
Step 2: Draw a box that starts at Q1 (15 minutes) and ends at Q3 (22 minutes).
Inside the box we place a vertical line to represent the median (18 minutes).
Step 3: Extend horizontal lines from the box out to the minimum value (13
minutes) and the maximum value (30 minutes).
Examples:
1. Students at a university are classified by gender and class rank.
2. A product is classified as acceptable or unacceptable and by the shift (day, afternoon, or night) on which it is manufactured.
3. A voter in a school bond referendum is classified as to party affiliation (Democrat, Republican, other) and the number of children that voter has attending school in the district (0, 1, 2, etc.).
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Contingency Tables – An Example
A manufacturer of preassembled windows produced 50 windows yesterday. This
morning the quality assurance inspector reviewed each window for all quality
aspects. Each was classified as acceptable or unacceptable and by the shift
on which it was produced. Thus we reported two variables on a single item.
The two variables are shift and quality. The results are reported in the
following table.
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