Descriptive Statistics
Qualitative (Categorical)
Measures of types and may be represented by a name, symbol or number code "What type" of "which category"
Quantative (Numerical)
Measures of values/counts are expressed as numbers Relates to qauntity of something, "how many" or "how much:
Absolute Measure
Measures variability in term os same uints
Discrete Data
Numerical data values that can be COUNTED & LISTED, cannot be broken into smaller pieces.
Continous Data
Numerical data values that cannot be COUNTED or LISTED, can be broken down into smaller parts
Incidence
Occurence of NEW cases of disease or injury a population over a specified period of time Incidence proportion: Proportion of an initially disease-free population that develops disease Incidence rate: Measures of incidence that incoporates time directly
Interquartile Range
The data that contains the middle 50%
Range
The difference between the largest and smallest value in a set
Standard Deviation
The amount we expect to deviate away from the mean value Square root of the "variance"
Prevalence Fomula
# EXISTING cases at time point/ # in TOTAL POPULATION at time point
Measures of Central Tendency
A value that describes a set of data by describing the central position of that data.
Variance
Average of square deviations Mean of data points, subtracting the mean from each data point individually, squaring THESE results How much individuals data points differ from the average (mean) of that data Spread out or scattered that data is
Ordinal Data
Classifies variables into categories which have a natural order or rank.
Statistics
Collection, organization, & interpretation of data
Nominal Data
Divides variables into mutually exclusive, labeled categories
Inferential Statistics
Drawing conclusions about that population based on the date collected
Weighted Mean
Each value is equally as important and carries the same weight in the equation
Dispersion
How a similar a set of scores MORE similar scores, LOWER the measure of dispersion LESS similar scores, MORE the measure of disperson
Comparison: Prevalance & Incidence
PREVELANCE Existing Disease (new and old cases) Denominator: whole population Does require follow up Depends on the duration of the illness Preferred measure when assessing burden of disease INCIDENCE New Disease (new cases only) Denominator: Population at risk Requires follow up to identify new cases Does not depend on the duration of the illness Preferred for studying etiology
Prevalence
Proportion of persons in a population, who have a particular disease or attribute at a specified point in time Point prevalence: prevalence measured at a particular point in time Period prevalence: prevalence measured over an interval of time
Descriptive Statistics
Summarizing/organizing the data related to the characteristics of the sample
Skewness
Symmetry in the distribution of SCORES. Skewed to RIGHT: positive Skewed to LEFT: negative
Relative Measure
Vairability of two or more data that are independent of the units of measurement
Quartiles
Values that divide a data set into four equal parts