Chapter 26: Statistics and Measures of Dispersion (Set-2)

A “variable” in statistics is

A Fixed constant always
B Only a formula
C Characteristic that changes
D Only a table

Data collected first-hand is called

A Primary data
B Secondary data
C Grouped data
D Bivariate data

Data taken from books/reports is

A Primary data
B Secondary data
C Raw data
D Nominal data

Raw data means

A Only grouped values
B Only percentages
C Unorganized original values
D Only graph points

A “class mark” is

A Midpoint of class
B Lower class limit
C Upper class limit
D Class width only

Class width is found by

A Lower minus upper
B Mean minus median
C Frequency minus CF
D Upper minus lower

In a “less-than ogive,” points are plotted using

A Upper boundaries
B Lower boundaries
C Class marks only
D Frequencies only

In a “more-than ogive,” points use

A Upper boundaries
B Midpoints only
C Lower boundaries
D Percentages only

A frequency polygon is drawn by joining

A Class limits with bars
B Midpoints with lines
C Cumulative CF points
D Only highest bars

A pie chart mainly shows

A Parts of whole
B Cumulative frequency
C Two-variable relation
D Class width pattern

When data has an extreme outlier, best average is

A Mean
B Range
C Median
D Variance

Mean is most affected by

A Middle values
B Class labels
C Sample size only
D Extreme values

If all values are equal, variance is

A 1
B 0
C Mean value
D Range value

A distribution with one peak is

A Bimodal
B Trimodal
C Unimodal
D Uniform

The second quartile Q2 is

A Median
B Mean
C Mode
D Range

Percentile P50 equals

A Mode
B Range
C Median
D Variance

A box plot is based on

A Five-number summary
B Mean and SD
C Class width only
D Correlation value

Which is an absolute dispersion measure

A Coefficient variation
B Standard deviation
C Coefficient range
D Relative deviation

A unit-free dispersion measure is

A Standard deviation
B Mean deviation
C Coefficient of variation
D Interquartile range

If mean = 20 and SD = 4, CV is

A 20%
B 4%
C 80%
D 5%

Mean deviation is also called

A Standard deviation
B Quartile deviation
C Relative deviation
D Mean absolute deviation

Mean deviation about median uses

A Squares from median
B Absolute from mean
C Absolute from median
D Squares from mean

For grouped data, mean deviation uses

A Class marks
B Class boundaries only
C Ogive points
D Pie angles

Variance unit is

A Same unit
B Squared unit
C No unit
D Percent unit

SD is preferred over variance because

A Uses only extremes
B Ignores outliers
C Same unit as data
D Always integer

Population SD formula divides by

A n
B n−1
C n+1
D √n

Sample variance commonly divides by

A n
B n−1
C n+1
D 2n

If a constant is added to data, variance

A Increases by constant
B Doubles always
C Unchanged
D Becomes zero

If data are multiplied by k, SD becomes

A |k| times
B k² times
C k/2 times
D Unchanged

If data are multiplied by k, variance becomes

A |k| times
B k times
C Unchanged
D k² times

Combined mean of two groups depends on

A Only two SDs
B Only two medians
C Sizes and means
D Only two ranges

If two series have equal mean, lower SD means

A Less consistency
B More consistency
C More skewness
D Higher median

Which measure is most robust to outliers

A Interquartile range
B Range
C Variance
D Mean

Median for even number of values is

A Middle value only
B Most frequent only
C Sum of two middle
D Average of two middle

The relationship “r = 0” indicates

A Perfect positive
B Perfect negative
C No linear relation
D Same mean always

If r = −1, the relation is

A Perfect negative
B Weak negative
C No relation
D Perfect positive

If r = +1, the relation is

A Weak positive
B Perfect positive
C No relation
D Perfect negative

Correlation is unaffected by

A Extreme outliers always
B Sample size always
C Change of origin, scale
D Frequency table only

Moments in statistics are mainly used for

A Shape description
B Finding class width
C Drawing histogram
D Counting frequencies

First raw moment about origin equals

A Mean
B Variance
C Median
D Mode

Skewness describes

A Peak height only
B Asymmetry of distribution
C Total data size
D Class width change

Kurtosis describes

A Central location
B Class frequency sum
C Peakedness/tailedness
D Scatter direction

A regression line is used to

A Find median only
B Draw histogram
C Compute range
D Predict one variable

Bivariate data means

A Two variables per item
B One variable only
C Only grouped classes
D Only categorical list

The normal distribution is

A Always two peaks
B Uniform flat line
C Bell-shaped curve
D Only step curve

In normal distribution, mean equals

A Mean = mode only
B Mean = median = mode
C Median = range
D Mode = variance

The 68–95–99.7 rule relates to

A Normal distribution spread
B Range calculation
C Ogive drawing
D Pie chart angles

Standard deviation mainly measures

A Middle position only
B Most frequent value
C Typical spread around mean
D Total observations

For data 1, 2, 3, 4, median is

A 2.5
B 2
C 3
D 4

For data 5, 5, 5, 5, SD is

A 5
B 1
C 25
D 0

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