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akredd90
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standard deviation

by akredd90 Fri Mar 16, 2012 12:55 am

The list shown consists of the times, in seconds,that it took each of 10 school children to run a distance of 400 meters. If the standard deviation of the running times is 22.4,rounded to the nearest tenth of a second,how many of the 10 running times are more than 1 standard deviation below the mean of the 10 running times?
70,75,80,85,90,105,105,130,130,130


A) One
B) Two
C) three
D) four
E) five
Last edited by akredd90 on Fri Mar 16, 2012 1:18 am, edited 1 time in total.
shubham_sagijain
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Re: standard deviation

by shubham_sagijain Fri Mar 16, 2012 1:09 am

ar69 Wrote:The list shown consists of the times, in seconds,that it took each of 10 school children to run a distance of 400 meters. If the standard deviation of the running times is 22.4,rounded to the nearest tenth of a second,how many of the 10 running times are more than 1 standard deviation below the mean of the 10 running times?

A) One
B) Two
C) three
D) four
E) five



Where is the list ? Please post the list as well.

Thanks,
Shubh
akredd90
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Re: standard deviation

by akredd90 Fri Mar 16, 2012 1:21 am

shubham_sagijain Wrote:
ar69 Wrote:The list shown consists of the times, in seconds,that it took each of 10 school children to run a distance of 400 meters. If the standard deviation of the running times is 22.4,rounded to the nearest tenth of a second,how many of the 10 running times are more than 1 standard deviation below the mean of the 10 running times?

A) One
B) Two
C) three
D) four
E) five



Where is the list ? Please post the list as well.

Thanks,
Shubh


Sorry .
I added the list in the question above.

Thank you
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Re: standard deviation

by shubham_sagijain Fri Mar 16, 2012 1:51 am

ar69 Wrote:
shubham_sagijain Wrote:
ar69 Wrote:The list shown consists of the times, in seconds,that it took each of 10 school children to run a distance of 400 meters. If the standard deviation of the running times is 22.4,rounded to the nearest tenth of a second,how many of the 10 running times are more than 1 standard deviation below the mean of the 10 running times?

A) One
B) Two
C) three
D) four
E) five



1) Calculate the mean of the given list
2) Subtract 1 S.D i.e 22.4 from the mean.
3) Now, notice that you will have only 2 values (running times) that are 'more than 1 SD below the mean'

Thanks,
Shubh
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Re: standard deviation

by jnelson0612 Sat Mar 17, 2012 11:34 pm

Thanks Shubh! Nice concise explanation. :-)
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Re: standard deviation

by baladon99 Fri Mar 23, 2012 3:34 pm

Although the method explained is perfectly alright, I feel the answer is 3.
Mean =100
S.D =22.4
mean-One S.D =77.6

Between 77.6 and 100 there are three values --> 80 , 85 and 90.
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Re: standard deviation

by RonPurewal Sat Mar 24, 2012 5:18 am

baladon99, i see what you're doing there, but that's not how the language works in this particular instance.

when you see "more than X amount below Y", the correct interpretation of this statement is "below Y by more than X amount". in other words, less than the quantity (Y - X).

i see how you got your interpretation -- you read the statement as "greater than a number that is one standard deviation below the mean" -- but, in this instance, that's an incorrect interpretation.
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Re: standard deviation

by baladon99 Mon Mar 26, 2012 4:16 am

RonPurewal Wrote:baladon99, i see what you're doing there, but that's not how the language works in this particular instance.

when you see "more than X amount below Y", the correct interpretation of this statement is "below Y by more than X amount". in other words, less than the quantity (Y - X).

i see how you got your interpretation -- you read the statement as "greater than a number that is one standard deviation below the mean" -- but, in this instance, that's an incorrect interpretation.

Thanks Ron. Guess I have understood the right interpretation now.
If the question is ,
how many of the 10 running times are more than 1 standard deviation above the mean of the 10 running times?

Will the answer be 3 ? i.e. 130 , 130 and 130.

Thanks ,

Bala
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Re: standard deviation

by tanyatomar Mon Mar 26, 2012 9:26 am

Hey Bala :) i think it should be 2 values (75 and 70) -->> mean is 110.
therefore 22.4 reduced from 110 = 77.6. Now only 2 values (75 n 70 are below 77.6...
:) let me know if am wrong :)
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Re: standard deviation

by jnelson0612 Sat Mar 31, 2012 10:03 pm

baladon99 Wrote:
RonPurewal Wrote:baladon99, i see what you're doing there, but that's not how the language works in this particular instance.

when you see "more than X amount below Y", the correct interpretation of this statement is "below Y by more than X amount". in other words, less than the quantity (Y - X).

i see how you got your interpretation -- you read the statement as "greater than a number that is one standard deviation below the mean" -- but, in this instance, that's an incorrect interpretation.

Thanks Ron. Guess I have understood the right interpretation now.
If the question is ,
how many of the 10 running times are more than 1 standard deviation above the mean of the 10 running times?

Will the answer be 3 ? i.e. 130 , 130 and 130.

Thanks ,

Bala


Correct! If one standard deviation above the mean is 122.4, then three points (130, 130, 130) are more than one standard deviation above the mean.
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jnelson0612
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Re: standard deviation

by jnelson0612 Sat Mar 31, 2012 10:14 pm

tanyatomar Wrote:Hey Bala :) i think it should be 2 values (75 and 70) -->> mean is 110.
therefore 22.4 reduced from 110 = 77.6. Now only 2 values (75 n 70 are below 77.6...
:) let me know if am wrong :)


I calculated the mean at 100 . . . can you check your math again?
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krishnan.anju1987
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Re: standard deviation

by krishnan.anju1987 Sun Jul 01, 2012 5:38 pm

Same here, even I calculated the mean as 100 and the value below which running times are to be found as 79.6.. That's right isn't it?
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Re: standard deviation

by jnelson0612 Sun Jul 01, 2012 9:03 pm

krishnan.anju1987 Wrote:Same here, even I calculated the mean as 100 and the value below which running times are to be found as 79.6.. That's right isn't it?


We agree on the mean as 100 and that is good. :-)

However, if the standard deviation is 22.4, then one standard deviation below the mean would be 100-22.4 = 77.6. That is the value corresponding with one standard deviation below the mean. We would then ask ourselves how many data points in this list are below 77.6. I see 70 and 75, or two data points.
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krishnan.anju1987
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Re: standard deviation

by krishnan.anju1987 Sun Jul 01, 2012 9:08 pm

Yup, that was my mistake and now that I look at the numbers again, pretty obvious one at that.
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Re: standard deviation

by jnelson0612 Sun Jul 01, 2012 10:43 pm

krishnan.anju1987 Wrote:Yup, that was my mistake and now that I look at the numbers again, pretty obvious one at that.


Glad that things are all cleared up! :-)
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