UNIT III - Measures of Dispersion
UNIT III - Measures of Dispersion
UNIT III - Measures of Dispersion
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Definition
Measures of dispersion are descriptive
statistics that describe how similar a set of
scores are to each other
The more similar the scores are to each other, the
lower the measure of dispersion will be
The less similar the scores are to each other, the
higher the measure of dispersion will be
In general, the more spread out a distribution is,
the larger the measure of dispersion will be
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Measures of Dispersion
Which of the
distributions of scores 125
has the larger 100
75
dispersion? 50
25
The upper distribution 0
has more dispersion 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
125
because the scores are 100
more spread out 75
50
That is, they are less 25
similar to each other 0
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
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Measures of Dispersion
There are three main measures of
dispersion:
The range
The semi-interquartile range (SIR)
Variance / standard deviation
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The Range
The range is defined as the difference between
the largest score in the set of data and the
smallest score in the set of data, XL - XS
What is the range of the following data:
4 8 1 6 6 2 9 3 6 9
The largest score (XL) is 9; the smallest score
(XS) is 1; the range is XL - XS = 9 - 1 = 8
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When To Use the Range
The range is used when
you have ordinal data or
you are presenting your results to people with little or
no knowledge of statistics
The range is rarely used in scientific work as it is
fairly insensitive
It depends on only two scores in the set of data, XL and
XS
Two very different sets of data can have the same
range:
1 1 1 1 9 vs 1 3 5 7 9
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The Semi-Interquartile Range
The semi-interquartile range (or SIR) is
defined as the difference of the first and
third quartiles divided by two
The first quartile is the 25th percentile
The third quartile is the 75th percentile
SIR = (Q3 - Q1) / 2
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SIR Example
What is the SIR for the 2
data to the right? 4 5 = 25th %tile
25 % of the scores are 6
below 5 8
5 is the first quartile 10
25 % of the scores are 12
above 25 14
25 is the third quartile
20 25 = 75th %tile
SIR = (Q3 - Q1) / 2 = (25 30
- 5) / 2 = 10 60 8
When To Use the SIR
The SIR is often used with skewed data as it
is insensitive to the extreme scores
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Variance
Variance is defined as the average of the square
deviations:
X 2
2
N
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What Does the Variance Formula
Mean?
First, it says to subtract the mean from each
of the scores
This difference is called a deviate or a deviation
score
The deviate tells us how far a given score is
from the typical, or average, score
Thus, the deviate is a measure of dispersion for
a given score
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What Does the Variance Formula
Mean?
Why can’t we simply take the average of the
deviates? That is, why isn’t variance defined
as:
2 X
N
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Standard Deviation
When the deviate scores are squared in variance,
their unit of measure is squared as well
E.g. If people’s weights are measured in pounds,
then the variance of the weights would be expressed
in pounds2 (or squared pounds)
Since squared units of measure are often
awkward to deal with, the square root of variance
is often used instead
The standard deviation is the square root of variance
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Standard Deviation
Standard deviation = variance
Variance = standard deviation2
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Computational Formula
When calculating variance, it is often easier to use
a computational formula which is algebraically
equivalent to the definitional formula:
X
2
X
2 2
X
2 N
N
N
9 81 2 4
8 64 1 1
6 36 -1 1
5 25 -2 4
8 64 1 1
6 36 -1 1
= 42 = 306 =0 = 12
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Computational Formula Example
X
2
X
2
N 2 X
2
2
N
N
2
42 12
306
6 6
6 2
306 294
6
12
6
2
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Variance of a Sample
Because the sample mean is not a perfect estimate
of the population mean, the formula for the
variance of a sample is slightly different from the
formula for the variance of a population:
s
2
X X 2
N 1
s2 is the sample variance, X is a score, X is the
sample mean, and N is the number of scores 20
Measure of Skew
Skew is a measure of symmetry in the
distribution of scores
Normal
(skew = 0)
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Measure of Skew
The following formula can be used to
determine skew:
X X
3
3 N
s
X X
2
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Measure of Skew
If s3 < 0, then the distribution has a negative
skew
If s3 > 0 then the distribution has a positive
skew
If s3 = 0 then the distribution is symmetrical
The more different s3 is from 0, the greater
the skew in the distribution
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Kurtosis
(Not Related to Halitosis)
Kurtosis measures whether the scores are spread
out more or less than they would be in a normal
(Gaussian) distribution
Mesokurtic
(s4 = 3)
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Kurtosis
When the distribution is normally distributed, its
kurtosis equals 3 and it is said to be mesokurtic
When the distribution is less spread out than
normal, its kurtosis is greater than 3 and it is said
to be leptokurtic
When the distribution is more spread out than
normal, its kurtosis is less than 3 and it is said to
be platykurtic
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Measure of Kurtosis
The measure of kurtosis is given by:
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X X
X X
2
N
s4
N
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s2 , s 3 , & s 4
Collectively, the variance (s2), skew (s3),
and kurtosis (s4) describe the shape of the
distribution
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