Chapter 26: Statistics and Measures of Dispersion (Set-3)

A data set has 9 values; the median position is

A 4th value
B 6th value
C 9th value
D 5th value

A data set has 10 values; median is the average of

A 4th and 5th
B 6th and 7th
C 5th and 6th
D 1st and 10th

For 2, 2, 3, 8, 10 the mean is

A 5
B 4
C 6
D 3

For 1, 2, 2, 9, 10 the median is

A 4
B 2
C 1
D 9

For 4, 4, 6, 7, 9 the mode is

A 6
B 7
C 4
D 9

If mean = 12 and median = 10, then (approx.) mode is

A 6
B 8
C 14
D 16

In grouped data, the class with highest frequency is

A Median class
B Mean class
C Modal class
D Quartile class

In grouped median formula, N represents

A Total frequency
B Class width
C Cumulative frequency
D Class midpoint

For grouped median, CF before median class is

A Frequency of median class
B Cumulative frequency previous
C Total frequency N
D Upper boundary

Range coefficient (relative) is

A (L+S)/(L−S)
B (L−S)/2
C (L−S)/(L+S)
D (L+S)/2

Interquartile range mainly covers

A Middle 50% data
B Middle 25% data
C Entire data range
D Only extremes

If Q1 = 12 and Q3 = 28, quartile deviation is

A 16
B 20
C 40
D 8

Mean deviation about mean uses

A (x−x̄) values
B (x−x̄)² values
C |x−x̄| values
D x² values

Mean deviation coefficient about median is

A Median/MD(Median)
B MD(Median)/Median
C MD(Mean)/Mean
D Mean/MD(Mean)

For ungrouped data, variance equals

A Mean of squared deviations
B Mean of absolute deviations
C Median of deviations
D Range of deviations

If variance is 2.25, SD equals

A 2.25
B 4.5
C 1.5
D 0.5

If SD = 6, variance is

A 36
B 12
C 6
D 3

A dataset has mean 50 and SD 5; z-score of 60 is

A 1
B 3
C 2
D 0

If a constant c is added to all values, mean

A Decreases by c
B Increases by c
C Becomes unchanged
D Becomes zero

If a constant c is added to all values, median

A Decreases by c
B Becomes unchanged
C Becomes half
D Increases by c

If all values are multiplied by 2, mean becomes

A Halved
B Unchanged
C Doubled
D Zero

If all values are multiplied by 2, SD becomes

A Doubled
B Halved
C Unchanged
D Squared

If all values are multiplied by 2, variance becomes

A Two times
B Four times
C Unchanged
D Half

A set has larger SD; it indicates

A Greater spread
B Smaller spread
C Same spread
D No data

Comparing two series with different units, best measure is

A Standard deviation
B Variance
C Coefficient of variation
D Range

If Series A CV < Series B CV, Series A is

A Less consistent
B More skewed
C Always normal
D More consistent

For data 1, 3, 5, 7, mean deviation about mean is

A 2
B 1
C 4
D 0

For data 2, 4, 6, 8, variance (population) is

A 4
B 2
C 5
D 10

For data 2, 4, 6, 8, SD (population) is

A 5
B √5
C 2
D √20

If mean = 30 and CV = 10%, SD is

A 10
B 0.3
C 3
D 300

Standard error becomes smaller when

A Sample size increases
B Mean increases only
C Range increases
D Variance becomes zero

A negatively skewed distribution generally has

A Mean > median
B Mean < median
C Mean = median
D Mode < mean

A positively skewed distribution generally has

A Mean < median
B Mean = mode
C Mean > median
D Median > mode

When plotting a histogram, rectangles touch because

A Data are categories
B Data are random
C Data are bivariate
D Data are continuous

Frequency density is needed when

A Unequal class widths
B Equal class widths
C No class intervals
D Only raw values

In a histogram with unequal widths, area represents

A Mean
B SD
C Frequency
D Median

A measure useful for “middle spread” is

A Quartile deviation
B Range
C Mean
D Mode

Variance cannot be

A Zero
B Positive
C Fractional
D Negative

The SD of a dataset is zero when

A Values are negative
B All values equal
C Mean is zero
D Range is large

For grouped mean using assumed mean method, we use

A Deviations from assumed mean
B Only class boundaries
C Cumulative frequency
D Only extremes

Step-deviation method is most helpful when

A Data are categorical
B Only two values
C Class width common
D No frequencies

In step-deviation, h represents

A Common class width
B Highest frequency
C Cumulative frequency
D Median position

If covariance is positive, variables tend to

A Move opposite
B Increase together
C Have no link
D Be identical

Correlation is preferred over covariance because

A Always positive
B Uses only medians
C Unit-free measure
D Ignores sample size

A good use of ogive is finding

A Quartiles graphically
B Mode directly
C Variance quickly
D Range only

If the distribution is symmetric, usually

A Mean less median
B Median less mean
C Mode not exists
D Mean equals median

If mean is greater than median, skewness is likely

A Negative skew
B Positive skew
C Zero skew
D Bimodal

A dataset where mode is not defined usually is

A All values different
B All values same
C Two values same
D Only grouped data

If two series have same SD but different means, compare consistency using

A Range
B Variance
C Coefficient of variation
D Mean deviation

The main purpose of dispersion measures is to

A Find central value
B Count observations
C Label categories
D Quantify spread

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