Frequency Distributions and Histograms
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Transcript Frequency Distributions and Histograms
Frequency Distributions
and Histograms
Statistics: Section 2.2
Histograms
Look like bar graphs but also have the
following criteria:
The bars have the same width and always touch
The width of a bar represents a quantitative value,
such as age, rather than a category
The height of each bar indicates frequency
They give information about a range of
individuals not just a single individual.
Histograms
Your first objective is to figure out how many
bars (or classes) you want. Usually 5 to 15
groups are used.
Next, find a class width.
(range)/number of classes
Always increase to the next whole number, even if
you got a whole number as an answer.
Class Limits
The lower class limit is the lowest value in a
particular class, as the upper class limit is the
highest value in a particular class.
The class width is the difference between the
lower class limit of one class with the lower
class limit of the next class.
Midpoint (class mark)
The center of the class
[(lower class limit) + (upper class limit)]/2
Frequency Table
A frequency table lists the following:
The limits of each class
The frequency with which the data fell into a class
The class midpoint
Class Boundaries
We don’t want a space between the bars, so
we “meet halfway” between the difference of
the “lower-upper limit” and the “higher-lower
limit”.
Example: Commuting
Distance in Dallas
13
47
10
3
16
20
17
40
4
2
7
25
8
21
19
15
3
17
14
6
12
45
1
8
4
16
11
18
23
12
6
2
14
13
7
15
46
12
9
18
34
13
41
28
36
17
24
27
29
9
14
26
10
24
37
31
8
16
12
16
Example: Step 1 – Class Width
I want there to be six classes – bars
eventually.
[(largest value)-(smallest value))]/Number of
classes
If I want 6 classes
(47-1)/6 = 7.7 -> 8
So my class width is 8.
Example – Step 2: Class Limits
Determine the lower limits
Smallest value is 1 and my class width is 8.
So my lower class limits are 1, 9, 17, 25, 33, 41
Determine the upper limits
The second class begins at 9 so my upper limit for
my first class must be 8.
8, 16, 24, 32, 40, 48
Example – Step 3: Find
Midpoints
The center of the class
[(lower class limit) + (upper class limit)]/2
(1+8)/2 = 9/2 = 4.5
(9+16)/2 = 25/2 = 12.5
(17+24)/2 = 41/2 = 20.5
28.5
36.5
44.5
Example – Step 4: Find the
Class Boundaries
Extend your class limits by ½ both ways.
Class 1:
Class 2:
Class 3:
Class 4:
Class 5:
Class 6:
0.5 – 8.5
8.5 – 16.5
16.5 – 24.5
24.5 – 32.5
32.5 – 40.5
40.5 – 48.5
Example – Step 5: Create a
tally
Count how many people fall into each class
and create a bar graph from that.
Relative-frequency Histograms
Relative frequency = Class frequency / total
of all frequencies
Percentages
The graphs should look the same except the
vertical scales will be different