Stat I CH - III
Stat I CH - III
Stat I CH - III
MEASURES OF CENTRAL
TENDENCY AND DISPERSION
Chapter Three
3. Measures of Central Tendency and Dispersion
3.1.1 Measures of Central Tendency for Ungrouped Data
If one number is used to describe the entire sample or population.
Such a number is called measures of central tendency
Measures of central tendency includes the following:
Arithmetic Mean
The population mean is the sum of all the population values di-
vided by the total number of population values.
The sample mean is the sum of all the sample values divided by
the total number of sample values.
If f1, f2, f3……fn are the respective frequencies of x1, x2, x3..xn.
Then A.M = f1x1 + f2x2 + f3x3 +….fnxn
f1 +f2 +f3+…..fn
Exercise 1: Suppose we have the following observations: 10, 15,
30, 7, 42, 79 and 83. Compute the mean
Exercise 2: weekly incomes of third year regular students are
given in the following frequency distribution.
Solution:
Mode:
The mode refers to that value in a distribution, which occur most
frequently. It is an actual value, which has the highest concentration
of items in and around it.
Exercise 11: 2, 7, 10, 15, 10, 17, 8, 10, 2
3.1.2 Measures of Dispersion for Ungrouped Data
The measures of central tendency serve to locate the center of the
distribution, but they do not reveal how the items are spread out
on either side of the center. This characteristic of a frequency dis-
tribution is commonly referred to as dispersion.
The degree of variation is evaluated by various measures of dis-
persion. Small dispersion indicates high uniformity of the items,
while large dispersion indicates less uniformity.
The dispersion or variability provides us one more step in in-
creasing our understanding of the pattern of the data. Further, a
high degree of uniformity (i.e. low degree of dispersion) is a de-
sirable quality.
Various measures of dispersions are in use.
The Range and Relative Range
The range is the largest score minus the smallest score.
Exercise 12: Find the range and relative range for the monthly
salary of ten workers in a certain paint factory given below.
462 480 534 624 498 552 606 588 516 570
The Quartile Deviation (Semi-inter quartile range), Q.D
The inter quartile range is the difference between the third and the
first quartiles of a set of items and semi-inter quartile range is half
of the inter quartile range.
Q.D = Q3 – Q1
2
Coefficient of Quartile Deviation (C.Q.D)
C.Q.D = (Q3 – Q1)/2 = 2×Q.D = Q3 – Q1
(Q3 + Q1)/2 Q3 + Q1 Q3 + Q1
Exercise 13: Compute Q.D and its coefficient for the following dis-
tribution.
values 140- 150- 160- 170- 180- 190- 200- 210- 220- 230- 240-
150 160 170 180 190 200 210 220 230 240 250
f 17 29 42 72 84 107 49 34 31 16 12
Mean Deviation and Coefficient of Mean Deviation
The Mean Deviation (M.D):
The mean deviation of a set of items is defined as the arithmetic
mean of the values of the absolute deviations from a given aver-
age. Depending up on the type of averages used we have different
mean deviations.
a) Mean Deviation about the mean
Steps to calculate M.D about the mean:
Find the arithmetic mean,
Find the deviations of each reading from the mean
Find the arithmetic mean of the deviations, ignoring sign.
b) Mean Deviation about the median. Steps:
Find the arithmetic median,
Find the deviations of each reading from the median
Find the arithmetic mean of the deviations, ignoring sign.
c) Mean Deviation about the mode
Find the arithmetic mode,
Find the deviations of each reading from the mode
Find the arithmetic mean of the deviations, ignoring sign.
Exercise 14:
1) The following are the number of visit made by ten mothers to the
local doctor’s surgery. 8, 6, 5, 5, 7, 4, 5, 9, 7, 4
Find mean deviation about mean, median and mode.
Solutions:
First calculate the three averages
Mean = 6
Median 5.5
Mode 5
Then take the deviations of each observation from these averages.
Xi 4 4 5 5 5 6 7 7 8 9 T
Xi - 6 2 2 1 1 1 0 1 1 2 3 14
Xi – 5.5 1.5 1.5 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.5 1.5 1.5 2.5 3.5 14
Xi – 5 1 1 0 0 0 1 2 2 3 4 14