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1.2 Measures of Central Tendency
1.2 Measures of Central Tendency
Measures of central tendency are used to determine the central values of a data set.
Measurement commonly used for measures of central tendency are the mode, median and
mean
The mode of a set of data is the value that occurs the most number of times in the set.
For the data set 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 14, 15, 16, the mode is 14 because 14 is the value that
occurs most
frequently. A data set that has one value that occurs with the highest frequency is said to be
unimodal.
For the data set 5, 5, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 9, 9, 10, two values 5 and 9 both occur with the same
highest frequency) which is three times. Hence the modes for this data set are 5 and 9. This
data set is said to be bimodal.
All sets of numerical data have a mean and a median but not all of them have modes.
Mode is a suitable and useful measure of central tendency in the shoe business. If the
manager of a shoe shop wants to stock the shoes which are most saleable, he needs to know
the mode so that sufficient orders of the desired size are made.
Median is the value at the centre of a data set after the data set is arranged in ascending or
descending order.
Since 67 is the middle number after the numbers are arranged in ascending order, 67 is the
median.
For data which has even number of observations, the median cannot be obtained directly
because there are no values in the centre. For this case, we obtain the median by finding the
average of two observations which are nearest to the centre.
For a grouped frequency distribution, the median is the (^)th observation. An estimate of the
median may be obtained.