Re: Whale steak
- From: "Inger_Eleonora" <inger_e.johansson@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sun, 23 Jul 2006 10:16:29 GMT
"Eric Stevens" <eric.stevens@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:0fh6c25qqgvrhp71e06lqofb8gbh33n1so@xxxxxxxxxx
On Sat, 22 Jul 2006 17:30:24 -0600, "Tedd Jacobs"be
<TJacobs@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
"Eric Stevens" wrote...
On 22 Jul 2006 15:02:42 -0700, "Tom McDonald" <kiltmac@xxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
Alan Crozier wrote:
"Tom McDonald" <kiltmac@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:1153591865.363471.156530@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
<snip>
"'medium' speed? Do you mean an average speed, the *median*?..."head.
Good night, Inger. Come back when you have a civil tongue in your
I can give you an answer, Tom. Swedish medel- in compound words can
medelvattenståndtranslated in a number of ways, one of which is "medium": medelhård
means medium-hard, medeldistans would be middle distance, medelfel is
standard error, medelsvensson means your average Swede,
speed.is mean water level, medelväre means mean value or average.
And, to get to the heart of the matter, medelhastighet is average
terms.
Thanks Alan.
However, as those of us who have taken statistical mathematicum know,
'average' is not a precise term without knowing whether the 'average'
intended is mean, mode or median. Inger did not so specify.
I've always understood average=mean with mode and median being
something different.
eric,
all are measures of central tendency and 'average' is an arbitrary term
which can be applied in different settings to any of the three proper
a
Not where I come from.
See http://www.answers.com/topic/arithmetic-mean
"ar·ith·met·ic mean (a(r'i(th-me(t'i(k)
n.
The value obtained by dividing the sum of a set of quantities by
the number of quantities in the set. Also called average."
mean is the average used in calculations involving the total sample, not
single variable. more relevant to the discussion of statistical analysis
than her concept of 'average' (in which "medium" is the wrong term) is a
more important question-- what is the sample size?
Soor Tedd. I won't say you are fudging but you are missing the point
of the discussion. Tom McDonald wrote:
"However, as those of us who have taken statistical mathematicum
know, 'average' is not a precise term without knowing whether the
'average' intended is mean, mode or median. Inger did not so
specify."
I have always understood 'average' to be the same as 'arithmetic
mean'. Except in special cases, I have never known it to be either the
mode or the median.
You aren't alone. this is one of the major problems reading a study where
the study refer to mean if they are refering to one or the other. In many
case studies where observation been made this also seems to be a problem for
the scholars writing the reports, dissertations or articles.
Inger E
.
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