Chapter 4: Variability Flashcards
Variability
a measure of how spread out the scores are in a distribution
T or F: the central tendency is more meaningful if the data is really spread out
false; it is less meaningful
central tendency vs. variability
central tendency describes the central point of the distribution and variability describes how the scores are scattered around that central point
range
the distance covered by the scores in a distribution
Simple & complex range formula
simple range: max-min
complex range= url for max - lrl for x min
interquartile range (IQR)
the distance between the x values taht correspond to the first and third quartiles
iqr formula
iqr= q3-q1
standard deviation
the average distance from the mean
population standard deviation steps
- Find the mean and N of the population
- Compute the deviation (distance from the mean) for each score
- Square each deviation
- Sum all the squared deviations
- Compute the mean of the squared deviations
- Take the square root of the variance
variance
the average squared distance from the mean
population variance steps
- Find the mean and N of the population
- Compute the deviation (distance from the mean) for each score
- Square each deviation
- Sum all the squared deviations
- Compute the mean of the squared deviations
population standard deviation formula
σ= √∑(X - μ)² / N
population variance formula
σ²= ∑(X - μ)² / N
definitional formula
SS= ∑(X - μ)²
computational formula
SS= ∑X² - (∑X²) / N
sampling error
the discrepancy between a statistic and its population parameter
degrees of freedom
the number of observations that are free to vary when calculating an estimate from a sample. n-1
σ²
population variance
σ
population standard deviation
s²
sample variance
s
sample standard deviation
calculating standard deviation for a population vs. sample
sample: use n-1 when computing the mean of the squared deviations
population: use n when computing the mean of the squared deviations
bias
a sample is biased if when you average across all samples the estimate is systematically over or under the true population value
If a constant is added to every score in a distribution, the standard deviation will ___
not change
If each score is multiplied by a constant, the standard deviation will ___
be multiplied by the same constant