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The Importance of Descriptive Statistics

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  • About
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About the lecture

In this lecture, we think about why we need descriptive statistics, focusing in particular on: (i) the breadth of information that can be collected during a psychology study, which descriptive statistics can serve to summarise; (ii) the common pairing between descriptive statistics and visual representations of data, such as graphs; (iii) defining the central tendency as understanding where the data clusters together; (iv) defining dispersion of data, which refers to how spread out the data is, or ‘how typical is typical’; (v) the three most commonly used measures of central tendency being the arithmetic mean, the median, and the mode; (vi) three commonly used measures of dispersion being the standard deviation, the range, and the interquartile range.

About the lecturer

Professor Dominic Dwyer is the chair for the BSc and MSc exam boards in the School of Psychology at Cardiff University. Professor Dwyer teaches introductory statistics for undergraduate years one and two. Professor Dwyer’s research is primarily focused on how animals and people learn, as well as how that learning is expressed as behaviour. Some key focus areas of this research are computational modelling, neurodegenerative disorders, and the assessment of individual differences. Some of Professor Dwyer’s recent publications include 'EXPRESS: Instrumental responses and Pavlovian stimuli as temporal referents in a peak procedure' (2022) and 'Face masks have emotion-dependent dissociable effects on accuracy and confidence in identifying facial expressions of emotion' (2022).

Cite this Lecture

APA style

Dwyer, D. (2022, April 21). Measures of Central Tendency - The Importance of Descriptive Statistics [Video]. MASSOLIT. https://massolit.io/options/measures-of-central-tendency?auth=0&lesson=6342&option=8369&type=lesson

MLA style

Dwyer, D. "Measures of Central Tendency – The Importance of Descriptive Statistics." MASSOLIT, uploaded by MASSOLIT, 21 Apr 2022, https://massolit.io/options/measures-of-central-tendency?auth=0&lesson=6342&option=8369&type=lesson