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10.7: Summary

  • Page ID
    64731

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    Qualitative data are often summarized using a frequency distribution, which is a table that contains the number, proportion, and percentage of time each possible value of the qualitative variable occurs. Such a table is often the only numerical summary available for qualitative data as such data usually have a nominal or ordinal measurement scale and no mathematical calculations are generally valid with such data. The frequency distribution can be used to determine which values of the variable occur more often than the others and which values are relatively rare.

    Frequency distributions can also be constructed for quantitative data, though some additional preparation is required. Unless the data takes on only a few values, classes must be constructed, and the number of times the observations fall within the classes is used to compute the frequencies, relative frequencies, and percentages for the frequency distribution. Classes should each have the same size and should be located so that they show the true structure of the data.

    To investigate possible associations between variables, cross-classified frequency distributions can be constructed. These frequency distributions show how often each pair of values from two different variables occur in the data. These frequency distributions are interpreted the same way as other frequency distributions but also provide information about the joint behavior of the two variables. When considering cross-classified frequency distributions

    , the possibility that trends are being covered up can be a major difficulty.

    This page titled 10.7: Summary is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by .

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