Guest Grantys Posted December 10, 2004 Posted December 10, 2004 Why do you have to use the mean in a standard deviation formula? Cant you use any other average? Only asking as it is part of my coursework in the advantages and disadvantades of the averages. Any help on this topic too would be most welcome! Thanks, Grant.
5614 Posted December 10, 2004 Posted December 10, 2004 thats like saying why do we use addition in the sum: 1 + 1 = 2 ? its part of the formula, thats how you do it!
5614 Posted December 10, 2004 Posted December 10, 2004 hmmm, i dont know any of the maths symbols on SFN so i tried typing it but it looks rubbish so i found it online: http://www.mathsrevision.net/gcse/sdeviation2.gif where that E thing means the sum of x is the number x-bar is the average and n is the number of numbers.... like if you have 5 pieces of data then n = 5
matt grime Posted December 10, 2004 Posted December 10, 2004 What do you mean, how is it derived? One wishes to have a measure of how spread out the data is. There are several ways of doing this (eg interquartile range), one is the standard deviation. It is a measure of how far things are away from the mean. Sadly one cannot just add up the (directed) distances from the mean of the sample points, as the answer will just be zero. One could add up the abs values of all the distances, indeed this is a recognized statistic. However, the preferred measure is the variance: E(X^2) - E(X)^2, It is the average of the sum of the squares of the distances from the origin. E meaning expectation, and X being the r.v. This has the benefit of giving more weight to those numbers which are further from the mean than those closer.
YT2095 Posted December 10, 2004 Posted December 10, 2004 so like an average of several averages then? the E thing is Sigma (Greek I think).
5614 Posted December 10, 2004 Posted December 10, 2004 there's also the mean deviation which is slight different formula here: http://www.gcseguide.co.uk/standa15.gif if someone could tell me how to use the maths symbols on SFN it would help, im using google image search for those!!
5614 Posted December 10, 2004 Posted December 10, 2004 so like an average of several averages then? yes.... i know the E thing is sigma from learning it in maths, well done for knowing it
YT2095 Posted December 10, 2004 Posted December 10, 2004 Actualy I didn`t know it from Maths, I learned it From Cyrillic and it`s history when I did Russian Lang. but thnx anyway
5614 Posted December 10, 2004 Posted December 10, 2004 i guessed you hadnt learnt it in a maths class hence i said "well done for knowing it"... many greek symbols and other symbols are used in maths, sigma, theta, pi & omega are all quite common ones.
bloodhound Posted December 10, 2004 Posted December 10, 2004 the mean in the formula is the sample mean, or if u have the population, then use the population mean. the actual form of standard deviation differs if ur calculating the population SD , or estimating the population from the sample SD in general. the formula where you divide by (n-1) gives you the unbiased estimator for SD if you only have a sample of the population
5614 Posted December 10, 2004 Posted December 10, 2004 whats the difference between dividing by (n-1) and n ? i mean, obviously they'd give different answers, but why are there two different variations for one forumla? whats the difference between the two?
bloodhound Posted December 10, 2004 Posted December 10, 2004 about ur question about different means. i am not sure. its highly likely that you wont get a unbiased estimate if u used a different mean like geometric mean, harmonic mean. etc. at best u might get an asymptoptically unbiased estimator.
bloodhound Posted December 10, 2004 Posted December 10, 2004 whats the difference between dividing by (n-1) and n ? i mean, obviously they'd give different answers, but why are there two different variations for one forumla? whats the difference between the two? if you dont have a whole population data, and only a random sample, then u use the n-1 formula. an estimator T(x) is called unbiased for theta if E(T(x))=theta... i.e the average of the estimators is the true value. unbiased estimators are generally the best estimators. if we find E(S^2) where s^2 is the formula with just n in it. then u get the value to be (1-1/n)sigma^2 which is not equal to the true variance we are extimating. in this case its asymptotically unbiased. since as n gets bigger, the estimator becomes closer to the real value. but a simple transformation gets us a proper unbiased one take S'^2=n/(n-1) S^2 where s^2 is from above that gives you E(s'^2)=sigma^2 (due to linearity of expectancy) and that is called the sample variance. dont worry too much about it.
matt grime Posted December 10, 2004 Posted December 10, 2004 The E I meant is in fact [math]\mathbb{E}[/math] not a sigma as bloodhound says, though apparently in response to a different remark, n and n-1 are used in different contexts depending on whether you want an unbaised estimator of the population variance or not. ah, he's added a further explanation now....
YT2095 Posted December 10, 2004 Posted December 10, 2004 where that E thing means the sum ofx is the number x-bar is the average and n is the number of numbers.... like if you have 5 pieces of data then n = 5 Matt, thanx so what did he mean then by "where that E thing means the sum of" I thought that was represented by Sigma? or was I mislead?
matt grime Posted December 10, 2004 Posted December 10, 2004 His E thing probably was a sigma *my* E thing was an expectation sign.,
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