Chapter 2: Frequency Distributions in Tables and Graphs

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Cumulative frequency distribution

Distributes sum of frequencies across a series of intervals

Cumulative relative frequency distribution

Distributes sum of relative frequencies across a series of intervals

A dot-line graph plotted at the midpoint of each interval

Frequency polygon

Bar chart/graph

Graphical display used to summarize frequency of discrete and categorical data, distributed in whole units or classes

Stem and leaf plot

Graphical display where each individual score is listed, organized by common digits shared by all scores listed to left, with remaining digits for each score listed to the right

Open interval

Interval with no defined upper or lower boundary

Cumulative relative frequencies sum to what?

1.0

The sum of relative frequencies across all intervals is equal to what?

1.0

What is a key distinction between a stem-leaf display and a histogram?

A stem-leaf display lists actual scores in a distribution vs. a histogram lists frequencies

Graphical displays similar to histograms, except that the vertical bars or rectangles do not touch

Bar charts

Cumulative frequencies can be added from the top down and...

Bottom up

Summary display that distributes the sum of frequencies across a series of intervals

Cumulative frequency distribution

Outliers

Extreme scores that fall substantially above or below most other scores in a distribution

True or False: a relative percent sums to total frequency count

False, a relative percent sums to 100%

A student scores in the 80th percentile on an exam, what does this mean in comparison to all other students?

The student scored higher than 80% of all others who took the same exam

When would a researcher construct a relative frequency table?

To summarize large data sets

True or False: a researcher observes that a single parent works 42.25 hours per week, the degree of accuracy of 42.25 is to the hundredths place (0.01)

True

Ogive

Dot-line graph summarizing cumulative percent of continuous data at upper boundary of each interval

Frequency polygon

Dot-line graph used summarizing frequency of continuous data at the midpoint of each interval

Rules for simple frequency distributions

Each interval is equidistant, the same score cannot occur in more than one interval, each interval is defined (it has a lower and upper boundary)

True or False: histograms are used to summarize ungrouped data, which is why each vertical rectangle touches the other

False, histograms are sued to summarize grouped data

A summary display for a distribution of data organized or summarized in terms of how often (or frequently) scores occur

Frequency distribution

Pie chart

Graphical display in shape of a circle, used to summarize relative percent of discrete and categorical data into sectors

Histogram

Graphical display summarizing frequency of continuous data, distributed in numeric intervals (grouped)

True or False: cumulative relative frequencies are added from top down or bottom up

True

True or False: whether you cumulate a frequency distribution from bottom up or top down depends on how you want to discuss the data

True

What are the data called when the frequency of each individual score or category is listed?

Ungrouped data

Percentile point

Value of an individual or score within a larger distribution

A dot-line graph plotted at the upper boundary of each interval

Ogive

Real range

One more than the difference between the largest and smallest value

Rules for constructing a histogram

(1) a vertical rectangle represents each interval and the height of the rectangle equals the frequency recorded for each interval, (2) each rectangle represents the frequency of all scores in a distribution, (3) each rectangle touches adjacent rectangles at the boundaries of each interval

What is the recommended number of intervals that should be included in a simple frequency distribution?

5-20 intervals

An ogive graphically summarizes what type of frequency distribution?

A cumulative percent distribution

Relative frequency distribution

Distributes proportion of scores in each interval, computed as frequency in each interval divided by total number of frequencies recorded

Cumulative percent distribution

Distributes sum of relative percents across series of intervals

Proportion

Part of all measured data, sum of all scores equals 1.0

Percentile rank

Percentage of scores with values that fall below a specified score in a distribution

Relative frequencies are commonly reported in academic journals as percents, why?

Percents are easier to read than decimals

Interval width

Range of values contained in each interval of a grouped frequency distribution

Grouped data

Set of scores distributed into intervals, frequency of each score can fall into any given interval

Ungrouped data

Set of scores or categories distributed individually

Simple frequency distribution

Summary display for (1) the frequency of each individual score or category (ungrouped data) or (2) frequency of scores falling within defined groups/intervals (grouped data) in a distribution

When is it appropriate to summarize frequencies for ungrouped data?

When data sets have only a few different scores and for qualitative or categorial variables

When cumulating frequencies from bottom up, you typically want to discuss the data in terms of?

"At most", "less than", and "at or below"

When cumulating frequencies from top down, you typically want to discuss data in terms of?

"At or above"

Interval

Discrete range of values within frequency of a subset of scores

Relative percent distribution

Distributes percentage of scores occurring in each interval relative to all scores distributed

Frequency distribution

Distribution of data organized or summarized in terms of how often a category, score, range of scores occurs

Why is it generally inappropriate to include an open interval in a simple frequency distribution?

It makes it difficult to identify if outliers exist in a data set

Frequency

Number of times/how often a category, score, or range of scores occurs

Interval boundaries

Upper and lower limits for each interval


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