Bbs13e Chapter02
Bbs13e Chapter02
Organizing and
Visualizing Variables
Tallying Data
One Two
Categorical Categorical
Variable Variables
Summary Contingency
Table Table
The number of classes depends on the number of values in the data. With a
larger number of values, typically there are more classes. In general, a
frequency distribution should have at least 5 but no more than 15 classes.
To determine the width of a class interval, you divide the range (Highest
value–Lowest value) of the data by the number of class groupings desired.
24, 35, 17, 21, 24, 37, 26, 46, 58, 30, 32, 13, 12, 38, 41, 43, 44, 27, 53,
27
Relative
Class Frequency Percentage
Frequency
10 but less than 20 3 .15 15%
20 but less than 30 6 .30 30%
30 but less than 40 5 .25 25%
Cumulative Cumulative
Class Frequency Percentage
Frequency Percentage
Summary Contingency
Table For One Table For Two
Variable Variables
The “Vital
Few”
Frequency Distributions
Ordered Array and
Cumulative Distributions
Stem-and-Leaf
Histogram Polygon Ogive
Display
Frequency
Total 20 1.00 100
4
(In a percentage
histogram the vertical
axis would be defined to 2
show the percentage of
observations per class)
0
5 15 25 35 45 55 More
Two Numerical
Variables
Scatter Time-
Plot Series
Plot
150
33 160
100
38 167
50
42 170
0
50 188
20 30 40 50 60 70
55 195
Volume per Day
60 200
Number of
Year Franchises Number of Franchises, 1996-2004
120
1996 43
100
1997 54 Franchises
Number of
80
1998 60 60
1999 73 40
2000 82 20
0
2001 95 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006
2002 107 Year
2003 99
2004 95
table
Allows interactive changing of the level of
•Growth funds
risk pattern depends
on market
200 20%
100 10%
0 0%
FR SO JR SR FR SO JR SR
100 25
0 0
Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4
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