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Measures of Central Tendency

The document discusses measures of central tendency, which describe the central or typical value in a data set. It defines the mean, median, and mode as the three main measures. The mean, or average, is the sum of all values divided by the number of values; it can be used for both discrete and continuous data. However, the mean is strongly influenced by outliers. The median is the middle value when data is arranged in order. The mode is the value that occurs most frequently. Different measures are more appropriate depending on the characteristics of the data set, such as whether it contains outliers.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
364 views2 pages

Measures of Central Tendency

The document discusses measures of central tendency, which describe the central or typical value in a data set. It defines the mean, median, and mode as the three main measures. The mean, or average, is the sum of all values divided by the number of values; it can be used for both discrete and continuous data. However, the mean is strongly influenced by outliers. The median is the middle value when data is arranged in order. The mode is the value that occurs most frequently. Different measures are more appropriate depending on the characteristics of the data set, such as whether it contains outliers.

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ann
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Measures of Central Tendency

Introduction

A measure of central tendency is a single value that attempts to describe a set of data
by identifying the central position within that set of data. As such, measures of central
tendency are sometimes called measures of central location. They are also classed as
summary statistics. The mean (often called the average) is most likely the measure of
central tendency that you are most familiar with, but there are others, such as the
median and the mode.

The mean, median and mode are all valid measures of central tendency, but under
different conditions, some measures of central tendency become more appropriate to
use than others. In the following sections, we will look at the mean, mode and median,
and learn how to calculate them and under what conditions they are most appropriate to
be used.

Mean (Arithmetic)

The mean (or average) is the most popular and well known measure of central
tendency. It can be used with both discrete and continuous data, although its use is
most often with continuous data (see our Types of Variable guide for data types). The
mean is equal to the sum of all the values in the data set divided by the number of
values in the data set. So, if we have \( n \) values in a data set and they have values \(
x_1, x_2, \) …\(, x_n \), the sample mean, usually denoted by \( \overline{x} \)
(pronounced "x bar"), is:

$$ \overline{x} = {{x_1 + x_2 + \dots + x_n}\over{n}} $$

This formula is usually written in a slightly different manner using the Greek capitol
letter, \( \sum \), pronounced "sigma", which means "sum of...":

$$ \overline{x} = {{\sum{x}}\over{n}} $$
You may have noticed that the above formula refers to the sample mean. So, why have
we called it a sample mean? This is because, in statistics, samples and populations
have very different meanings and these differences are very important, even if, in the
case of the mean, they are calculated in the same way. To acknowledge that we are
calculating the population mean and not the sample mean, we use the Greek lower
case letter "mu", denoted as \( \mu \):

$$ \mu = {{\sum{x}}\over{n}} $$

The mean is essentially a model of your data set. It is the value that is most common.
You will notice, however, that the mean is not often one of the actual values that you
have observed in your data set. However, one of its important properties is that it
minimises error in the prediction of any one value in your data set. That is, it is the value
that produces the lowest amount of error from all other values in the data set.

An important property of the mean is that it includes every value in your data set as part
of the calculation. In addition, the mean is the only measure of central tendency where
the sum of the deviations of each value from the mean is always zero.

When not to use the mean

The mean has one main disadvantage: it is particularly susceptible to the influence of
outliers. These are values that are unusual compared to the rest of the data set by
being especially small or large in numerical value. For example, consider the wages of
staff at a factory below:

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