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Perplex
Perplex
  • Dashboard
Topics
Exponents & LogarithmsRounding & ErrorSequences & SeriesCounting & BinomialsProof and ReasoningComplex NumbersAlgebra Skills
Cartesian plane & linesQuadraticsFunction TheoryTransformations & asymptotesPolynomials
2D & 3D GeometryTrig equations & identitiesVectors
ProbabilityDescriptive StatisticsBivariate StatisticsDistributions & Random Variables
DifferentiationIntegrationDifferential EquationsMaclaurin
Paper 3
Plus
Calculator Skills
Review VideosFormula BookletAll Study Sets
BlogLanding Page
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Frequency Tables, Histograms and cumulative frequency diagrams
Mixed Practice
Frequency Tables, Histograms and cumulative frequency diagrams
Descriptive Statistics

Frequency Tables, Histograms and cumulative frequency diagrams

0 of 0 exercises completed

In this lesson, we learn about different ways to visualize frequency data, including tables, histograms, and cumulative frequency diagrams.

Want a deeper conceptual understanding? Try our interactive lesson! (Plus Only)

Discrete Frequency Tables
SL 4.2

Datasets can be represented in frequency tables, with a row containing the values that exist in the data and a row containing the frequency, or number of times each value appears.

​xi​​

​1​

​2​

​3​

​fi​​

​5​

​4​

​3​


The mean of frequency data can be calculated using the formula:

​
xˉ=ni=1∑k​fi​xi​​,n=i=1∑k​fi​📖
​

If we take the above

Note that ​fi​​ is the frequency of the value ​xi​, so ​n=i=1∑k​fi​​ is just the total number of points.

Grouped Frequency Tables
SL 4.2

When data is continuous, we cannot have a column per possible value, as there are infinitely many.


Instead, we use a grouped frequency table to break up the data into specific intervals.


If all the intervals have equal size, then the modal class is the interval in which the most values fall.


We can also estimate the mean from grouped data as if it were a discrete frequency table using the mid-interval values, that is the average of the upper and lower bounds of each interval.

Histograms
SL 4.2

Grouped frequency tables can also be turned into histograms (aka bar graph) by drawing rectangles with base corresponding to the intervals, and heights corresponding to the frequency.

Cumulative frequency graphs and tables
SL 4.2

Cumulative frequency graphs are a powerful visual representation of continuous data.


The value of ​y​ at each point ​x​ on the curve represents the number of data points less than ​x.


We start with a grouped frequency table, and add a row for cumulative frequency, which is the number of items in an interval and all previous (lower) intervals. To plot the diagram, we make a point from each column. The ​x​-coordinates are the upper bound of each interval, and the ​y​-coordinates are the cumulative frequency.

Length

​3≤x<4​

​4≤x<5​

​5≤x<6​

​6≤x<7​

Frequency

​3​

​6​

​7​

​3​

Cumulative

Frequency

​3​

​9​

​16​

​19​


Median, quartiles & percentiles on CF Graphs
SL 4.2

Cumulative frequency diagrams can be used to find medians, quartiles, and percentiles.


In the same way that the first quartile, ​Q1​, is the value greater than a quarter (25%) of data values, the ​kth​ percentile is the value greater than ​k%​ of the data values.


  • ​Q1​:  ​0.25×​ the max

  • Median: ​0.5×​ the max

  • ​Q3​:  ​0.75×​ the max

  • ​kth​ percentile: ​100k​×​ the max.

Nice work completing Frequency Tables, Histograms and cumulative frequency diagrams, here's a quick recap of what we covered:

Skills covered

Mixed Practice

Exercises checked off

I'm Plex, here to help you understand this concept!
/
All units
/
Frequency Tables, Histograms and cumulative frequency diagrams
Mixed Practice
Frequency Tables, Histograms and cumulative frequency diagrams
Descriptive Statistics

Frequency Tables, Histograms and cumulative frequency diagrams

0 of 0 exercises completed

In this lesson, we learn about different ways to visualize frequency data, including tables, histograms, and cumulative frequency diagrams.

Want a deeper conceptual understanding? Try our interactive lesson! (Plus Only)

Discrete Frequency Tables
SL 4.2

Datasets can be represented in frequency tables, with a row containing the values that exist in the data and a row containing the frequency, or number of times each value appears.

​xi​​

​1​

​2​

​3​

​fi​​

​5​

​4​

​3​


The mean of frequency data can be calculated using the formula:

​
xˉ=ni=1∑k​fi​xi​​,n=i=1∑k​fi​📖
​

If we take the above

Note that ​fi​​ is the frequency of the value ​xi​, so ​n=i=1∑k​fi​​ is just the total number of points.

Grouped Frequency Tables
SL 4.2

When data is continuous, we cannot have a column per possible value, as there are infinitely many.


Instead, we use a grouped frequency table to break up the data into specific intervals.


If all the intervals have equal size, then the modal class is the interval in which the most values fall.


We can also estimate the mean from grouped data as if it were a discrete frequency table using the mid-interval values, that is the average of the upper and lower bounds of each interval.

Histograms
SL 4.2

Grouped frequency tables can also be turned into histograms (aka bar graph) by drawing rectangles with base corresponding to the intervals, and heights corresponding to the frequency.

Cumulative frequency graphs and tables
SL 4.2

Cumulative frequency graphs are a powerful visual representation of continuous data.


The value of ​y​ at each point ​x​ on the curve represents the number of data points less than ​x.


We start with a grouped frequency table, and add a row for cumulative frequency, which is the number of items in an interval and all previous (lower) intervals. To plot the diagram, we make a point from each column. The ​x​-coordinates are the upper bound of each interval, and the ​y​-coordinates are the cumulative frequency.

Length

​3≤x<4​

​4≤x<5​

​5≤x<6​

​6≤x<7​

Frequency

​3​

​6​

​7​

​3​

Cumulative

Frequency

​3​

​9​

​16​

​19​


Median, quartiles & percentiles on CF Graphs
SL 4.2

Cumulative frequency diagrams can be used to find medians, quartiles, and percentiles.


In the same way that the first quartile, ​Q1​, is the value greater than a quarter (25%) of data values, the ​kth​ percentile is the value greater than ​k%​ of the data values.


  • ​Q1​:  ​0.25×​ the max

  • Median: ​0.5×​ the max

  • ​Q3​:  ​0.75×​ the max

  • ​kth​ percentile: ​100k​×​ the max.

Nice work completing Frequency Tables, Histograms and cumulative frequency diagrams, here's a quick recap of what we covered:

Skills covered

Mixed Practice

Exercises checked off

I'm Plex, here to help you understand this concept!

Generating starter questions...

1 free

Generating starter questions...

1 free