Descriptive statistics
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Descriptive statistics is a branch of statistics that denotes any of the many techniques used to summarize a set of data. In a sense, we are using the data on members of a set to describe the set. The techniques are commonly classified as:
- Graphical description in which we use graphs to summarize data.
- Tabular description in which we use tables to summarize data.
- Summary statistics in which we calculate certain values to summarize data.
We have two objectives for our summary:
- We want to choose a statistic that shows how different units seem similar. Statistical textbooks call the solution to this objective, a measure of central tendency.
- We want to choose another statistic that shows how they differ. This kind of statistic is often called a measure of statistical variability.
The most common measures of variability for quantitative data are the variance; its square root, the standard deviation; the range; interquartile range; and the absolute deviation.
Steps in descriptive statistics
- Collect data
- Classify data
- Summarize data
- Present data
- Proceed to inferential statistics if there is enough data to draw a conclusion.
See also
- statistical regularity
- planning statistical research
- statistical inference
- summary statistics
- data mining
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