Using Summary Statistics to Make Informed Decisions
Across
- 3. A distribution with two distinct peaks
- 5. A space in the distribution with no (or relatively few) data points
- 12. With a population, the mean of the squared deviations
- 15. A range - the difference of the first and third quartiles
- 16. Least observed value of a distribution
- 17. A number that is half the sum of the maximum and the minimum values of a distribution
- 18. The maximum value of a distribution minus the minimum value
- 19. The distinctive peaks of a distribution
- 20. A disproportionately large group of data points near a specific value
Down
- 1. With a dataset, the graph of the five number summary
- 2. The points that break the distribution into equally-sized ordered portions
- 4. With a dataset, the difference between a number and the mean
- 6. A quantity that gives information about a sample drawn from a population
- 7. A statistic (single number) that provides information about a sample drawn from a population
- 8. The name of the groups when data is broken down into four equal-sized groups
- 9. A quantity that gives information about the entire population
- 10. A distribution with only one peak
- 11. The sum of the values of a distribution divided by the number of values
- 13. Greatest observed value of a distribution
- 14. A data point that is more than 150% of the IQR below Q1 or above Q3