Midhinge

From testwiki
Revision as of 18:05, 20 January 2025 by imported>Sbb (top: {{math}}/{{mvar}} for inline maths for consistency with equations; <math display="block"> instead of colon-indent; {{abbr}}/{{dfn}} for defining/using abbrs; italics for words-as-words (MOS:WAW))
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

In statistics, the midhinge (Template:Dfn) is the average of the first and third quartiles and is thus a measure of location. Equivalently, it is the 25% trimmed mid-range or 25% midsummary; it is an L-estimator. The midhinge Template:Math is defined as MH(X)=Q1,3(X)=Q1(X)+Q3(X)2=P25(X)+P75(X)2=M25(X).

The midhinge is related to the interquartile range (Template:Dfn), the difference of the third and first quartiles (i.e. Template:Math), which is a measure of statistical dispersion. The two are complementary in sense that if one knows the midhinge and the Template:Abbr, one can find the first and third quartiles.

The use of the term hinge for the lower or upper quartiles derives from John Tukey's work on exploratory data analysis in the late 1970s,[1] and midhinge is a fairly modern term dating from around that time. The midhinge is slightly simpler to calculate than the trimean (Template:Dfn), which originated in the same context and equals the average of the median (Template:Math Template:Math) and the midhinge: MH(X)=2TM(X)med(X)=2Q1+2Q2+Q34Q2.

See also

References

Template:Reflist

  1. Tukey, J. W. (1977) Exploratory Data Analysis, Addison-Wesley. Template:ISBN