[Home]History of Median

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Revision 7 . . (edit) June 30, 2001 3:58 pm by Larry Sanger
Revision 4 . . March 25, 2001 12:25 am by Dick Beldin
Revision 3 . . February 25, 2001 9:38 pm by RoseParks
  

Difference (from prior major revision) (minor diff, author diff)

Changed: 1,7c1
back to Summary Statistics -- Summarizing Statistical Data

The median is that value that separates the highest half of the sample from the lowest half. To find the median, arrange all the observations from lowest value to highest value and pick the middle one. If there are an even number of observations, take that average of the two middle values. When we use the median to describe what the observations have in common, there are several choices for a measure of variability, the Range, the Interquartile Range, and the [Absolute Deviation]?. Since the median is the same as the second quartile, its calculation is
illustrated in the article on Quartiles.


Dick Beldin

The median is that value that separates the highest half of the sample from the lowest half. To find the median, arrange all the observations from lowest value to highest value and pick the middle one. If there are an even number of observations, take that average of the two middle values. When we use the median to describe what the observations have in common, there are several choices for a measure of variability, the range, the interquartile range, and the [absolute deviation]?. Since the median is the same as the second quartile, its calculation is illustrated in the article on quartiles.

Added: 8a3
back to summary statistics -- summarizing statistical data

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