1 / 10

Measures of Central Tendency

Measures of Central Tendency. Psych 101 with Professor Michael Birnbaum. Four “Averages”. Mode: The Mode of Variable X is the value of X that is most frequent. Median: The Median of X is the value of X such that an equal number are above and below X.

mika
Download Presentation

Measures of Central Tendency

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Measures of Central Tendency Psych 101 with Professor Michael Birnbaum

  2. Four “Averages” • Mode: The Mode of Variable X is the value of X that is most frequent. • Median: The Median of X is the value of X such that an equal number are above and below X. • Midpoint: Value of X that is half-way between the smallest and largest value. • Mean: The Arithmetic Average (Sum of X, divided by the number).

  3. “Averages” claims to fame: • The Mode is most often correct • The Median minimizes the sum of absolute deviations. • The Mean minimizes the sum of squared deviations (sum of squared errors). • The Midpoint minimizes the biggest deviation.

  4. Example: Suppose we have n = 5 numbers, as follows: X1 = 10 X2 = 0 X3 = 10 X4 = 8 X5 = 9

  5. Find the Mode: X1 = 10 X2 = 0 X3 = 10 X4 = 8 X5 = 9 The Mode is the value of X that is most frequent. There are more 10s than any other value. So, the Mode is 10.

  6. Find the Median The Median has an equal number above and below it. Here, 9 has 2 numbers above and 2 below, so the Median is 9. X1 = 10 X2 = 0 X3 = 10 X4 = 8 X5 = 9

  7. Find the Midpoint X1 = 10 X2 = 0 X3 = 10 X4 = 8 X5 = 9 The Midpoint is half-way Between the smallest Value of X and the largest.

  8. Find the Mean X1 = 10 X2 = 0 X3 = 10 X4 = 8 X5 = 9

  9. Summary of Example Mode= 10 Median = 9 Midpoint = 5 Mean = 7.4 All are “averages”

  10. Next Idea: Variance • If we must guess, and if we are penalized by the sum of squared errors, the Mean is our best guess. • If we always guess the Mean, the cost will be minimal. • The average cost per guess is the Variance, or Mean Squared Error. • Square root of that Mean Square is the standard deviation.

More Related