Read these sections and complete the questions at the end of each section. First, we will define central tendency and introduce mean, median, and mode. We will then elaborate on median and mean and discusses their strengths and weaknesses in measuring central tendency. Finally, we'll address variability, range, interquartile range, variance, and the standard deviation.
Measures of Variability
Interquartile Range
The interquartile range (IQR) is the range of the middle of the scores in a distribution. It is computed as follows:
For Quiz 1, the percentile is
and the
percentile is
. The interquartile range is therefore
. For Quiz 2, which has greater spread, the
percentile is
, the
percentile is
, and the interquartile range is
. Recall that in the discussion of box plots, the
percentile was called the upper hinge and the
percentile was called the lower hinge. Using this terminology, the interquartile range is referred to as the H-spread.
A related measure of variability is called the semi-interquartile range. The semi-interquartile range is defined simply as the interquartile range divided by . If a distribution is symmetric, the median plus or minus the semi-interquartile range contains half the scores in the distribution.