Standard Deviation and Variance
Standard Deviation and Variance
Standard Deviation
The Standard Deviation is a measure of how spread out numbers are.
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:
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.
Your first step is to find the Mean:
Answer:
so the mean (average) height is 394 mm. Let's plot this on the chart:
To calculate the Variance, take each difference, square it, and then average the result:
And the Standard Deviation is just the square root of Variance, so:
Standard Deviation
σ = √21,704
= 147.32...
= 147 (to the nearest mm)
And the good thing about the Standard Deviation is that it is useful. Now we can show which
heights are within one Standard Deviation (147mm) of the Mean:
So, using the Standard Deviation we have a "standard" way of knowing what is normal, and what
is extra large or extra small.
Rottweilers are tall dogs. And Dachshunds are a bit short ... but don't tell them!
But if the data is a Sample (a selection taken from a bigger Population), then the calculation
changes!
All other calculations stay the same, including how we calculated the mean.
Example: if our 5 dogs are just a sample of a bigger population of dogs, we divide by 4 instead
of 5 like this:
Formulas
Here are the two formulas, explained at Standard Deviation Formulas if you want to know more:
If we just add up the differences from the mean ... the negatives cancel the positives:
4 + 4 − 4 − 44 = 0
Oh No! It also gives a value of 4, Even though the differences are more spread out.
So let us try squaring each difference (and taking the square root at the end):
√( 42 + 42 + 42 + 424) = √( 64 4 ) = 4
√( 72 + 12 + 62 + 22 4) = √( 90 4 ) = 4.74...
That is nice! The Standard Deviation is bigger when the differences are more spread out ... just
what we want.
In fact this method is a similar idea to distance between points, just applied in a different way.
And it is easier to use algebra on squares and square roots than absolute values, which makes the
standard deviation easy to use in other areas of mathematics.