Annals of Emergency Medicine
Volume 19, Issue 3 , Pages 309-315, March 1990

Introduction to biostatistics: Part 2, descriptive statistics

    MD, PhD
  • Gary M Gaddis
  • , PhD
  • Monica L Gaddis

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationAddress for reprints: Monica L Gaddis, PhD, Department of Surgery, Truman Medical Center, 2301 Holmes, Kansas City, Missouri 64108.

Received 1 September 1989; accepted 4 December 1989.

Descriptive statistics include measures of central tendency and variability. Measures of central tendency include mean, median, and mode. The mean is the arithmetic average of data from interval or ratio scales. The median reflects the 50th percentile score. The mode is the most frequently occurring value of a data distribution. Measures of variability include range, interquartile range, standard deviation, and standard error of the mean. The range describes the spread between the extreme values of data. Interquartile range is data included between the 25th and 75th percentile of a distribution. Standard deviation describes variability of data about the sample mean, while standard error of the mean helps describe the distribution of several sample means about a true population mean. Finally, confidence intervals, which are derived from the standard error of the mean, define an interval likely to include a true population value, based on sample statistical values and probability characteristics of data distributions.

biostatistics

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PII: S0196-0644(05)82052-9

Annals of Emergency Medicine
Volume 19, Issue 3 , Pages 309-315, March 1990