A frequency is the number of times a value of the data occurs. The sum of all the frequency values represents the total number of students included in the sample. It is commonly used to group data of quantitative types. Frequency distributions can be displayed in a table, histogram, line graph, dot plot, or pie chart, just to name a few. A histogram is a graphical representation of tabulated frequencies, shown as adjacent rectangles, erected over discrete intervals (bins), with an area equal to the frequency of the observations in the interval.
In a frequency distribution table, the data values are grouped into classes of equal widths. The class boundaries are individual values chosen to separate classes (often being the midpoints between upper and lower class limits of adjacent classes), while the smallest and largest observations in each class are called class limits. Frequency distributions can typically have between 5 and 20 classes, all with equal widths, mutually exclusive, continuous, and exhaustive.
Aus Kapitel 2:
Now Playing
Summarizing and Visualizing Data
18.9K Ansichten
Summarizing and Visualizing Data
8.7K Ansichten
Summarizing and Visualizing Data
7.4K Ansichten
Summarizing and Visualizing Data
10.3K Ansichten
Summarizing and Visualizing Data
57.1K Ansichten
Summarizing and Visualizing Data
6.7K Ansichten
Summarizing and Visualizing Data
5.5K Ansichten
Summarizing and Visualizing Data
12.4K Ansichten
Summarizing and Visualizing Data
5.3K Ansichten
Summarizing and Visualizing Data
6.6K Ansichten
Summarizing and Visualizing Data
4.2K Ansichten
Summarizing and Visualizing Data
15.8K Ansichten
Summarizing and Visualizing Data
5.0K Ansichten
Summarizing and Visualizing Data
6.6K Ansichten
Summarizing and Visualizing Data
13.6K Ansichten
Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Alle Rechte vorbehalten