Engineering Fundamentals: An Introduction to Engineering, 4th ed.c

(Steven Felgate) #1
compute how much each reported density deviates from the mean, add up all the deviations,
and then take their average. Table 19.4 shows the deviation from the mean for each reported
density. As one can see, the sum of the deviations is zero for both groups. This is not a coinci-
dence. In fact, the sum of deviations from the mean for any given sample is always zero. This
can be readily verified by considering the following:

(19.1)


(19.2)


wherexirepresents data points, is the average,nis the number of data points, anddirepre-
sents the deviation from average.

x


di 1 xix 2


x


1


na


n

i 1

xi


19.4 Measures of Central Tendency and Variation —Mean, Median, and Standard Deviation 639


TABLE 19.3 Reported Densities of Water at 20C


Group A Findings Group B Findings


r(kg /m


3


) r(kg /m


3


)
1020 950
1015 940
990 890
1060 1080
1030 1120
950 900
975 1040
1020 1150
980 910
960 1020

ravg 1000 ravg 1000


TABLE 19.4 Deviations from the Mean


Group A Group B


R (RRavg) |(RRavg)| R (RRavg) |(RRavg)|


1020  20 20 950  50 50
1015  15 15 940  60 60
990  10 10 890  110 110
1060  60 60 1080  80 80
1030  30 30 1120  120 120
950  50 50 900  100 100
975  25 25 1040  40 40
1020  20 20 1150  150 150
980  20 20 910  90 90
960  40 40 1020  20 20

g 0 g 290 g 0 g 820


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