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Measures of Central Tendency

Measures of Central Tendency

Measures of Central Tendency

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Arithmetic Mean - The Balancing Act

  • Most common measure; the dataset's "center of gravity".
  • Calculation: Sum of all values divided by the count of values.
    • Formula: $\bar{x} = \frac{\sum x_i}{n}$
    • Where $\sum x_i$ = sum of individual values, $n$ = number of values.
  • Key Properties:
    • Simple to compute & interpret.
    • Includes all data points in calculation.
    • Highly affected by extreme values (outliers).
    • Sum of deviations of values from their mean is always 0: $\sum (x_i - \bar{x}) = 0$.
  • Best for symmetrical data; less suitable for skewed distributions.

Arithmetic Mean as Balance Point with Outliers

⭐ For a moderately skewed distribution, the empirical relationship is: Mean - Mode ≈ 3 (Mean - Median).

Median - The Resilient Middle

  • Middlemost value in an ordered dataset (ascending/descending).
  • Represents the 50th percentile; divides distribution into two equal halves.
  • Calculation:
    • Odd (n) observations: The $(\frac{n+1}{2})^{th}$ value.
    • Even (n) observations: Average of the $(\frac{n}{2})^{th}$ and $(\frac{n}{2} + 1)^{th}$ values.
  • Key advantage: Unaffected by extreme values (outliers), making it robust.
    • Preferred for skewed data (e.g., income, hospital stay duration, incubation period).
  • 📌 "Median in the Middle" - stays central despite extreme pulls. Mean and Median in Symmetric and Skewed Distributions

⭐ For skewed distributions (e.g., income data, incubation periods), Median is a more robust and often preferred measure of central tendency over Mean, as it is not influenced by outliers.

  • Definition: The value that appears most frequently in a data set.
  • Key Characteristics:
    • Represents the most common observation.
    • Can be:
      • Unimodal (one mode)
      • Bimodal (two modes)
      • Multimodal (>2 modes)
      • No mode (all values occur equally)
    • Unaffected by extreme values (outliers).
    • Only average for nominal (categorical) data.
  • Empirical Relationship (moderately skewed distributions):
    • $Mode \approx 3 \cdot Median - 2 \cdot Mean$
  • Advantages: Easy to understand; useful for qualitative data & identifying the most frequent size/category.
  • Disadvantages: Not always unique/may not exist; not based on all values; poor for algebraic manipulation.

⭐ For a J-shaped distribution, the mode is at the highest point, which is at one end of the distribution.

Histogram of Coin Flips

Relationships & Selection - The Skewed Showdown

  • Distribution & Central Tendency:
    • Symmetrical: Mean = Median = Mode.
    • Positively Skewed (Right): Mean > Median > Mode. 📌 Mean pulled by right tail.
    • Negatively Skewed (Left): Mean < Median < Mode. 📌 Mean pulled by left tail.
  • Empirical Rule (Moderately Skewed, Unimodal):
    • $Mode \approx 3 \times Median - 2 \times Mean$.
  • Selection Guide:
    • Mean: Best for normal quantitative data; sensitive to outliers.
    • Median: Best for skewed quantitative data, data with outliers, or ordinal data.
    • Mode: Best for nominal data; useful for bimodal/multimodal or qualitative data.

Mean, Median, Mode in Skewed and Symmetrical Distributions

⭐ The Median is the most robust measure of central tendency for skewed distributions or data with extreme outliers as it is least affected by them.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Mean (average) is most affected by outliers; use for normal distributions.
  • Median (middle value, 50th percentile) is robust to outliers; best for skewed data.
  • Mode is the most frequent value; useful for categorical/nominal data.
  • Symmetrical distribution: Mean = Median = Mode.
  • Positively skewed (right tail): Mean > Median > Mode.
  • Negatively skewed (left tail): Mean < Median < Mode.
  • Geometric Mean for growth rates/ratios; Harmonic Mean for average rates.

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