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Measurements: High Accuracy High Precision

Accuracy refers to how close a measured value is to the true value, while precision refers to how close repeated measurements are to each other. A measurement can be precise, meaning repeated measurements produce similar results, but not accurate if the measurements consistently differ from the true value by a fixed amount, known as bias. The standard deviation and variance are used to quantify precision, with standard deviation being the square root of the variance, which is calculated by taking the average of the squared differences from the mean. An example is provided to demonstrate calculating the mean, variance, and standard deviation of repeated dog height measurements.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
39 views

Measurements: High Accuracy High Precision

Accuracy refers to how close a measured value is to the true value, while precision refers to how close repeated measurements are to each other. A measurement can be precise, meaning repeated measurements produce similar results, but not accurate if the measurements consistently differ from the true value by a fixed amount, known as bias. The standard deviation and variance are used to quantify precision, with standard deviation being the square root of the variance, which is calculated by taking the average of the squared differences from the mean. An example is provided to demonstrate calculating the mean, variance, and standard deviation of repeated dog height measurements.

Uploaded by

N
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Measurements

High
Accuracy
Low Accuracy
High Accuracy
High
Precision
Low
Precision

High

Precision

Measurements
Accuracy and Precision
They mean slightly different things!
Accuracy
Accuracy is how close a measured value is to
the actual (true) value.
Precision
Precision is how close the measured values
are to each other.
Examples of Precision and Accuracy:

Measurements
So, if you are playing soccer and you
always hit the left goal post instead of
scoring, then you are not accurate, but you
are precise!
Bias (don't let precision fool you!)
If you measure something several times
and all values are close, they may all be
wrong if there is a "Bias"
Bias is a systematic (built-in) error which
makes all measurements wrong by a
certain amount

Measurements
Standard Deviation and Variance
Deviation just means how far from the normal
Standard Deviation
The Standard Deviation is a measure of how spread out numbers
are.
Its symbol is (the greek letter sigma)
The formula is easy: it is the square root of the Variance. So now
you ask, "What is the Variance?"
Variance
The Variance is defined as:
The average of the squared differences from the Mean.
To calculate the variance follow these steps:
Work out the Mean (the simple average of the numbers) Then for
each number: subtract the Mean and square the result (the squared
difference). Then work out the average of those squared
differences. (Why Square?)

Measurements
Example
You and your friends have just
measured the heights of your
dogs (in millimeters):
The heights (at the shoulders)
are: 600mm, 470mm, 170mm,
430mm and 300mm.
Find out the Mean, the Variance,
and the Standard Deviation.

Measurements

Measurements
Your first step is to find
the Mean:

Mean =

600 + 470 + 170 +


430 + 300
5

1970
=

= 394
5

Measurements
Now, we calculate each dogs
difference from the Mean:

Measurements
To calculate the Variance, take
each difference, square it, and
then average the result:

Measurements
So, the Variance is 21,704.
And the Standard Deviation is
just the square root of Variance,
so:
Standard Deviation: = 21,704
= 147.32... = 147 (to the nearest
mm)

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