Learning Outcomes
- Recognize, describe, and calculate the measures of the center of data: mean, median, and mode.
The “center” of a data set is also a way of describing location. The two most widely used measures of the “center” of the data are the mean (average) and the median. To calculate the mean weight of [latex]50[/latex] people, add the [latex]50[/latex] weights together and divide by [latex]50[/latex]. To find the median weight of the [latex]50[/latex] people, order the data and find the number that splits the data into two equal parts. The median is generally a better measure of the center when there are extreme values or outliers because it is not affected by the precise numerical values of the outliers. The mean is the most common measure of the center.
Note
The words “mean” and “average” are often used interchangeably. The substitution of one word for the other is common practice. The technical term is “arithmetic mean” and “average” is technically a center location. However, in practice among non-statisticians, “average” is commonly accepted for “arithmetic mean.”
When each value in the data set is not unique, the mean can be calculated by multiplying each distinct value by its frequency and then dividing the sum by the total number of data values. The letter used to represent the
sample mean is an [latex]x[/latex] with a bar over it (read “[latex]x[/latex] bar”): [latex]\displaystyle\overline{{x}}[/latex].
The Greek letter [latex]μ[/latex] (pronounced “mew”) represents the population mean. One of the requirements for the sample mean to be a good estimate of the population mean is for the sample taken to be truly random.
To see that both ways of calculating the mean are the same, consider the sample:
[latex]1[/latex]; [latex]1[/latex]; [latex]1[/latex]; [latex]2[/latex]; [latex]2[/latex]; [latex]3[/latex]; [latex]4[/latex]; [latex]4[/latex]; [latex]4[/latex]; [latex]4[/latex]; [latex]4[/latex]
In the second example, the frequencies are [latex]3[/latex], [latex]2[/latex], [latex]1[/latex], and [latex]5[/latex].
You can quickly find the location of the median by using the expression [latex]\displaystyle\frac{{{n}+{1}}}{{2}}[/latex].
The letter [latex]n[/latex] is the total number of data values in the sample. If [latex]n[/latex] is an odd number, the median is the middle value of the ordered data (ordered smallest to largest). If [latex]n[/latex] is an even number, the median is equal to the two middle values added together and divided by two after the data has been ordered. For example, if the total number of data values is [latex]97[/latex], then [latex]\displaystyle\frac{{{n}+{1}}}{{2}}=\frac{{{97}+{1}}}{{2}}={49}[/latex]. The median is the [latex]49[/latex]th value in the ordered data. If the total number of data values is [latex]100[/latex], then [latex]\displaystyle\frac{{{n}+{1}}}{{2}}=\frac{{{100}+{1}}}{{2}}[/latex] = [latex]50.5[/latex]. The median occurs midway between the [latex]50[/latex]th and [latex]51[/latex]st values. The location of the median and the value of the median are not the same. The upper case letter [latex]M[/latex] is often used to represent the median. The next example illustrates the location of the median and the value of the median.
Example
AIDS data indicating the number of months a patient with AIDS lives after taking a new antibody drug are as follows (smallest to largest):
[latex]3[/latex]; [latex]4[/latex]; [latex]8[/latex]; [latex]8[/latex]; [latex]10[/latex]; [latex]11[/latex]; [latex]12[/latex]; [latex]13[/latex]; [latex]14[/latex]; [latex]15[/latex]; [latex]15[/latex]; [latex]16[/latex]; [latex]16[/latex]; [latex]17[/latex]; [latex]17[/latex]; [latex]18[/latex]; [latex]21[/latex]; [latex]22[/latex]; [latex]22[/latex]; [latex]24[/latex]; [latex]24[/latex]; [latex]25[/latex]; [latex]26[/latex]; [latex]26[/latex]; [latex]27[/latex]; [latex]27[/latex]; [latex]29[/latex]; [latex]29[/latex]; [latex]31[/latex]; [latex]32[/latex]; [latex]33[/latex]; [latex]33[/latex]; [latex]34[/latex]; [latex]34[/latex]; [latex]35[/latex]; [latex]37[/latex]; [latex]40[/latex]; [latex]44[/latex]; [latex]44[/latex]; [latex]47[/latex]
Calculate the mean and the median.
Finding the Mean and the Median Using the TI-83, 83+, 84, 84+ Calculator
Clear list L1. Pres STAT 4:ClrList. Enter 2nd 1 for list L1. Press ENTER.
Enter data into the list editor. Press STAT 1:EDIT.
Put the data values into list L1.
Press STAT and arrow to CALC. Press 1:1-VarStats. Press 2nd 1 for L1 and then ENTER.
Press the down and up arrow keys to scroll.
[latex]\displaystyle\overline{{x}}[/latex]= [latex]23.6[/latex], [latex]M[/latex] = [latex]24[/latex]
Try It
The following data show the number of months patients typically wait on a transplant list before getting surgery. The data are ordered from smallest to largest. Calculate the mean and median.
[latex]3[/latex]; [latex]4[/latex]; [latex]5[/latex]; [latex]7[/latex]; [latex]7[/latex]; [latex]7[/latex]; [latex]7[/latex]; [latex]8[/latex]; [latex]8[/latex]; [latex]9[/latex]; [latex]9[/latex]; [latex]10[/latex]; [latex]10[/latex]; [latex]10[/latex]; [latex]10[/latex]; [latex]10[/latex]; [latex]11[/latex]; [latex]12[/latex]; [latex]12[/latex]; [latex]13[/latex]; [latex]14[/latex]; [latex]14[/latex]; [latex]15[/latex]; [latex]15[/latex]; [latex]17[/latex]; [latex]17[/latex]; [latex]18[/latex]; [latex]19[/latex]; [latex]19[/latex]; [latex]19[/latex]; [latex]21[/latex]; [latex]21[/latex]; [latex]22[/latex]; [latex]22[/latex]; [latex]23[/latex]; [latex]24[/latex]; [latex]24[/latex]; [latex]24[/latex]; [latex]24[/latex]
example
Suppose that in a small town of [latex]50[/latex] people, one person earns $[latex]5,000,000[/latex] per year and the other [latex]49[/latex] each earn $[latex]30,000[/latex]. Which is the better measure of the “center”: the mean or the median?
Try It
In a sample of [latex]60[/latex] households, one house is worth $[latex]2,500,000[/latex]. Half of the rest are worth $[latex]280,000[/latex], and all the others are worth $[latex]315,000[/latex]. Which is the better measure of the “center”: the mean or the median?
Another measure of the center is the mode. The mode is the most frequent value. There can be more than one mode in a data set as long as those values have the same frequency and that frequency is the highest. A data set with two modes is called bimodal.
Example
Statistics exam scores for [latex]20[/latex] students are as follows:
[latex]50[/latex], [latex]53[/latex], [latex]59[/latex], [latex]59[/latex], [latex]63[/latex], [latex]63[/latex], [latex]72[/latex], [latex]72[/latex], [latex]72[/latex], [latex]72[/latex], [latex]72[/latex], [latex]76[/latex], [latex]78[/latex], [latex]81[/latex], [latex]83[/latex], [latex]84[/latex], [latex]84[/latex], [latex]84[/latex], [latex]90[/latex], [latex]93[/latex]
Find the mode.
Try It
The number of books checked out from the library from [latex]25[/latex] students are as follows:
[latex]0[/latex], [latex]0[/latex], [latex]0[/latex], [latex]1[/latex], [latex]2[/latex], [latex]3[/latex], [latex]3[/latex], [latex]4[/latex], [latex]4[/latex], [latex]5[/latex], [latex]5[/latex], [latex]7[/latex], [latex]7[/latex], [latex]7[/latex], [latex]7[/latex], [latex]8[/latex], [latex]8[/latex], [latex]8[/latex], [latex]9[/latex], [latex]10[/latex], [latex]10[/latex], [latex]11[/latex], [latex]11[/latex], [latex]12[/latex], [latex]12[/latex]
Find the mode.
Example
Five real estate exam scores are [latex]430[/latex], [latex]430[/latex], [latex]480[/latex], [latex]480[/latex], [latex]495[/latex]. The data set is bimodal because the scores [latex]430[/latex] and [latex]480[/latex] each occur twice.
When is the mode the best measure of the “center”? Consider a weight loss program that advertises a mean weight loss of six pounds the first week of the program. The mode might indicate that most people lose two pounds the first week, making the program less appealing.
Note
The mode can be calculated for qualitative data as well as for quantitative data. For example, if the data set is: red, red, red, green, green, yellow, purple, black, blue, the mode is red.
Statistical software will easily calculate the mean, the median, and the mode. Some graphing calculators can also make these calculations. In the real world, people make these calculations using software.
Try It
Five credit scores are [latex]680[/latex], [latex]680[/latex], [latex]700[/latex], [latex]720[/latex], [latex]720[/latex]. The data set is bimodal because the scores [latex]680[/latex] and [latex]720[/latex] each occur twice. Consider the annual earnings of workers at a factory. The mode is $[latex]25,000[/latex] and occurs [latex]150[/latex] times out of [latex]301[/latex]. The median is $[latex]50,000[/latex] and the mean is $[latex]47,500[/latex]. What would be the best measure of the “center”?
Watch the following video from Khan Academy on finding the mean, median and mode of a set of data.
The Law of Large Numbers and the Mean
The Law of Large Numbers says that if you take samples of larger and larger size from any population, then the mean [latex]\displaystyle\overline{{x}}[/latex] of the sample is very likely to get closer and closer to [latex]µ[/latex]. This is discussed in more detail later in the text.
Sampling Distributions and Statistic of a Sampling Distribution
You can think of a sampling distribution as a relative frequency distribution with a great many samples. Suppose thirty randomly selected students were asked the number of movies they watched the previous week. The results are in the relative frequency table shown below.
# of movies | Relative Frequency |
[latex]0[/latex] | [latex]\displaystyle\frac{{5}}{{30}}[/latex] |
[latex]1[/latex] | [latex]\displaystyle\frac{{15}}{{30}}[/latex] |
[latex]2[/latex] | [latex]\displaystyle\frac{{6}}{{30}}[/latex] |
[latex]3[/latex] | [latex]\displaystyle\frac{{3}}{{30}}[/latex] |
[latex]4[/latex] | [latex]\displaystyle\frac{{1}}{{30}}[/latex] |
If you let the number of samples get very large (say, 300 million or more), the relative frequency table becomes a relative frequency distribution.
A statistic is a number calculated from a sample. Statistic examples include the mean, the median and the mode as well as others. The sample mean [latex]\displaystyle\overline{{x}}[/latex] is an example of a statistic which estimates the population mean [latex]μ[/latex].
Calculating the Mean of Grouped Frequency Tables
When only grouped data is available, you do not know the individual data values (we only know intervals and interval frequencies); therefore, you cannot compute an exact mean for the data set. What we must do is estimate the actual mean by calculating the mean of a frequency table. A frequency table is a data representation in which grouped data is displayed along with the corresponding frequencies. To calculate the mean from a grouped frequency table we can apply the basic definition of mean:
[latex]\displaystyle\text{mean}=\frac{{\text{data sum}}}{{\text{number of data values}}}[/latex]. We simply need to modify the definition to fit within the restrictions of a frequency table.
Since we do not know the individual data values we can instead find the midpoint of each interval. The midpoint is [latex]\displaystyle\frac{{\text{lower boundary } + \text{ upper boundary}}}{{2}}[/latex] We can now modify the mean definition to be [latex]\displaystyle\text{Mean of Frequency Table} = \frac{\sum\nolimits{fm}}{\sum\nolimits{f}}[/latex] where [latex]f[/latex] = the frequency of the interval and [latex]m[/latex] = the midpoint of the interval.
example
A frequency table displaying professor Blount’s last statistic test is shown. Find the best estimate of the class mean.
Grade Interval | Number of Students |
[latex]50–56.5[/latex] | [latex]1[/latex] |
[latex]56.5–62.5[/latex] | [latex]0[/latex] |
[latex]62.5–68.5[/latex] | [latex]4[/latex] |
[latex]68.5–74.5[/latex] | [latex]4[/latex] |
[latex]74.5–80.5[/latex] | [latex]2[/latex] |
[latex]80.5–86.5[/latex] | [latex]3[/latex] |
[latex]86.5–92.5[/latex] | [latex]4[/latex] |
[latex]92.5–98.5[/latex] | [latex]1[/latex] |
Try It
Maris conducted a study on the effect that playing video games has on memory recall. As part of her study, she compiled the following data:
Hours Teenagers Spend on Video Games | Number of Teenagers |
[latex]0–3.5[/latex] | [latex]3[/latex] |
[latex]3.5–7.5[/latex] | [latex]7[/latex] |
[latex]7.5–11.5[/latex] | [latex]12[/latex] |
[latex]11.5–15.5[/latex] | [latex]7[/latex] |
[latex]15.5–19.5[/latex] | [latex]9[/latex] |
What is the best estimate for the mean number of hours spent playing video games?
Review
The mean and the median can be calculated to help you find the “center” of a data set. The mean is the best estimate for the actual data set, but the median is the best measurement when a data set contains several outliers or extreme values. The mode will tell you the most frequently occurring datum (or data) in your data set. The mean, median, and mode are extremely helpful when you need to analyze your data, but if your data set consists of ranges which lack specific values, the mean may seem impossible to calculate. However, the mean can be approximated if you add the lower boundary with the upper boundary and divide by two to find the midpoint of each interval. Multiply each midpoint by the number of values found in the corresponding range. Divide the sum of these values by the total number of data values in the set.
Formula Review
[latex]\displaystyle\mu=\frac{{\sum{f}{m}}}{{\sum{f}}}[/latex]
Where [latex]f[/latex] = interval frequencies and [latex]m[/latex] = interval midpoints.
References
Data from The World Bank, available online at http://www.worldbank.org (accessed April 3, 2013).
“Demographics: Obesity – adult prevalence rate.” Indexmundi. Available online at http://www.indexmundi.com/g/r.aspx?t=50&v=2228&l=en (accessed April 3, 2013).
Candela Citations
- OpenStax, Statistics, Measures of the Center of the Data. Located at: http://cnx.org/contents/30189442-6998-4686-ac05-ed152b91b9de@17.44. License: CC BY: Attribution
- Introductory Statistics . Authored by: Barbara Illowski, Susan Dean. Provided by: Open Stax. Located at: http://cnx.org/contents/30189442-6998-4686-ac05-ed152b91b9de@17.44. License: CC BY: Attribution. License Terms: Download for free at http://cnx.org/contents/30189442-6998-4686-ac05-ed152b91b9de@17.44
- Finding mean, median, and mode | Descriptive statistics | Probability and Statistics | Khan Academy . Authored by: Khan Academy. Located at: https://youtu.be/k3aKKasOmIw. License: All Rights Reserved. License Terms: Standard YouTube License