A New View of Statistics | |
Percentile Ranges
The most
common of these is the interquartile range, although even this
is a seldom-visited feature on the statistical map. It is used with
the median to give an idea of centrality and spread of skewed
or otherwise grossly non-normally-distributed variables. Measures of
training are often skewed enough to merit use of percentiles instead
of the mean and standard deviation. For example, weekly training in a
group of novice athletes might have a median of 5 and an
interquartile range of 3-12 hours/week.
Here's something challenging for the real lovers of numbers. The mean ± SD encloses 68% of the data on average for a normally distributed variable. So if you want to use a percentile range that corresponds to the mean ± SD, what should it be? Answer: 16th-84th. If I had my way, this measure would replace the interquartile range. We could call it the standard percentile range
We're right out on the horizon now. Let's get back to familiar territory.
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Last updated 29 April 97