Median: Difference between revisions
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For practical purposes, different measures of location and dispersion are often compared on the basis of how well the corresponding population values can be estimated from a sample of data. The median, estimated using the sample median, has good properties in this regard. While it is not usually optimal if a given population distribution is assumed, its properties are always reasonably good. For example, a comparison of the [[Efficiency (statistics)|efficiency]] of candidate estimators shows that the sample mean is more statistically efficient than the sample median when data are uncontaminated by data from heavy-tailed distributions or from mixtures of distributions, but less efficient otherwise, and that the efficiency of the sample median is higher than that for a wide range of distributions. |
For practical purposes, different measures of location and dispersion are often compared on the basis of how well the corresponding population values can be estimated from a sample of data. The median, estimated using the sample median, has good properties in this regard. While it is not usually optimal if a given population distribution is assumed, its properties are always reasonably good. For example, a comparison of the [[Efficiency (statistics)|efficiency]] of candidate estimators shows that the sample mean is more statistically efficient than the sample median when data are uncontaminated by data from heavy-tailed distributions or from mixtures of distributions, but less efficient otherwise, and that the efficiency of the sample median is higher than that for a wide range of distributions. |
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Also Derpa Derpa Derp |
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==Medians of probability distributions== |
==Medians of probability distributions== |
Revision as of 23:18, 16 October 2012
In statistics and probability theory, median is described as the numerical value separating the higher half of a sample, a population, or a probability distribution, from the lower half. The median of a finite list of numbers can be found by arranging all the observations from lowest value to highest value and picking the middle one. If there is an even number of observations, then there is no single middle value; the median is then usually defined to be the mean of the two middle values.[1][2]
A median is only defined on one-dimensional data, and is independent of any distance metric. A geometric median, on the other hand, is defined in any number of dimensions.
In a sample of data, or a finite population, there may be no member of the sample whose value is identical to the median (in the case of an even sample size), and, if there is such a member, there may be more than one so that the median may not uniquely identify a sample member. Nonetheless, the value of the median is uniquely determined with the usual definition. A related concept, in which the outcome is forced to correspond to a member of the sample, is the medoid.
At most, half the population have values strictly less than the median, and, at most, half have values strictly greater than the median. If each group contains less than half the population, then some of the population is exactly equal to the median. For example, if a < b < c, then the median of the list {a, b, c} is b. If a <> b <> c as well, then only a is strictly less than the median, and only c is strictly greater than the median. Since each group is less than half (one-third, in fact), the leftover b is strictly equal to the median (a truism).
Likewise, if a < b < c < d, then the median of the list {a, b, c, d} is the mean of b and c; i.e., it is (b + c)/2.
The median can be used as a measure of location when a distribution is skewed, when end-values are not known, or when one requires reduced importance to be attached to outliers, e.g., because they may be measurement errors.
In terms of notation, some authors represent the median of a variable x either as or as [1] There is no simple, widely accepted standard notation for the median, so the use of these or other symbols for the median needs to be explicitly defined when they are introduced.
Measures of location and dispersion
The median is one of a number of ways of summarising the typical values associated with members of a statistical population; thus, it is a possible location parameter.
When the median is used as a location parameter in descriptive statistics, there are several choices for a measure of variability: the range, the interquartile range, the mean absolute deviation, and the median absolute deviation. Since the median is the same as the second quartile, its calculation is illustrated in the article on quartiles.
For practical purposes, different measures of location and dispersion are often compared on the basis of how well the corresponding population values can be estimated from a sample of data. The median, estimated using the sample median, has good properties in this regard. While it is not usually optimal if a given population distribution is assumed, its properties are always reasonably good. For example, a comparison of the efficiency of candidate estimators shows that the sample mean is more statistically efficient than the sample median when data are uncontaminated by data from heavy-tailed distributions or from mixtures of distributions, but less efficient otherwise, and that the efficiency of the sample median is higher than that for a wide range of distributions. Also Derpa Derpa Derp
Medians of probability distributions
For any probability distribution on the real line R with cumulative distribution function F, regardless of whether it is any kind of continuous probability distribution, in particular an absolutely continuous distribution (and therefore has a probability density function), or a discrete probability distribution, a median is by definition any real number m that satisfies the inequalities
or, equivalently, the inequalities
in which a Lebesgue–Stieltjes integral is used. For an absolutely continuous probability distribution with probability density function ƒ, the median satisfies
Any probability distribution on R has at least one median, but there may be more than one median. Where exactly one median exists, statisticians speak of "the median" correctly; even when the median is not unique, some statisticians speak of "the median" informally.
Medians of particular distributions
The medians of certain types of distributions can be easily calculated from their parameters:
- The median of a normal distribution with mean μ and variance σ2 is μ. In fact, for a normal distribution, mean = median = mode.
- The median of a uniform distribution in the interval [a, b] is (a + b) / 2, which is also the mean.
- The median of a Cauchy distribution with location parameter x0 and scale parameter y is x0, the location parameter.
- The median of an exponential distribution with rate parameter λ is the natural logarithm of 2 divided by the rate parameter: λ−1ln 2.
- The median of a Weibull distribution with shape parameter k and scale parameter λ is λ(ln 2)1/k.
Medians in descriptive statistics
The median is used primarily for skewed distributions, which it summarizes differently than the arithmetic mean. Consider the multiset { 1, 2, 2, 2, 3, 14 }. The median is 2 in this case, as is the mode, and it might be seen as a better indication of central tendency than the arithmetic mean of 4.
Calculation of medians is a popular technique in summary statistics and summarizing statistical data, since it is simple to understand and easy to calculate, while also giving a measure that is more robust in the presence of outlier values than is the mean.
Medians for populations
An optimality property
The mean absolute error of a real variable c with respect to the random variable X is
Provided that the probability distribution of X is such that the above expectation exists, then m is a median of X if and only if m is a minimizer of the mean absolute error with respect to X.[3] In particular, m is a sample median if and only if m minimizes the arithmetic mean of the absolute deviations.
See also k-medians clustering.
Unimodal distributions
It can be shown for a unimodal distribution that the mean and the median lie within (3/5)1/2 times the standard deviation of each other.[4] In symbols
where || is the absolute value.
A similar relation holds between the mode and the median. In this case the mode and the median lie within 31/2 times the standard deviation of each other.
An inequality relating means and medians
If the distribution has finite variance, then the distance between the median and the mean is bounded by one standard deviation.
This bound was proved by Mallows,[5] who used Jensen's inequality twice, as follows. We have
The first and third inequalities come from Jensen's inequality applied to the absolute-value function and the square function, which are each convex. The second inequality comes from the fact that a median minimizes the absolute deviation function
This proof can easily be generalized to obtain a multivariate version of the inequality,[6] as follows:
where m is a spatial median, that is, a minimizer of the function The spatial median is unique when the data-set's dimension is two or more.[7][8] An alternative proof uses the one-sided Chebyshev inequality; it appears in an inequality on location and scale parameters.
Jensen's inequality for medians
Jensen's inequality states that for any random variable x with a finite expectation E(X) and for any convex function f then
It has been shown[9] that if x is a real variable with a unique median m and f is a C function then
A C function is a real valued function, defined on the set of real numbers R, with the property that for any real t
is a closed interval, a singleton or an empty set.
Medians for samples
The sample median
Efficient computation of the sample median
Even though sorting n items requires O(n log n) operations, selection algorithms can compute the kth-smallest of n items (e.g., the median) with only O(kn) operations.[citation needed]
Easy explanation of the sample median
In individual series (if number of observation is very low) first one must arrange all the observations in ascending order. Then count(n) total number of observation in given data.
If n is odd then Median (M) = value of ((n + 1)/2)th item term.
If n is even then Median (M) = value of [((n)/2)th item term + ((n)/2 + 1)th item term ]/2
- For an odd number of values
As an example, we will calculate the sample median for the following set of observations: 1, 5, 2, 8, 7.
Start by sorting the values: 1, 2, 5, 7, 8.
In this case, the median is 5 since it is the middle observation in the ordered list.
The median is the ((n + 1)/2)th item, where n is the number of values. For example, for the list {1, 2, 5, 7, 8}, we have n = 5, so the median is the ((5 + 1)/2)th item.
- median = (6/2)th item
- median = 3rd item
- median = 5
- For an even number of values
As an example, we will calculate the sample median for the following set of observations: 1, 6, 2, 8, 7, 2.
Start by sorting the values: 1, 2, 2, 6, 7, 8.
In this case, the arithmetic mean of the two middlemost terms is (2 + 6)/2 = 4. Therefore, the median is 4 since it is the arithmetic mean of the middle observations in the ordered list.
We also use this formula MEDIAN = {(n + 1 )/2}th item . n = number of values
As above example 1, 2, 2, 6, 7, 8 n = 6 Median = {(6 + 1)/2}th item = 3.5th item. In this case, the median is average of the 3rd number and the next one (the fourth number). The median is (2 + 6)/2 which is 4.
Variance
The distribution of both the sample mean and the sample median were determined by Laplace.[10] The distribution of the sample median from a population with a density function ƒ( x ) is asymptotically normal with mean m and variance is[11]
where m is the median value of distribution and n is the sample size. In practice this may be difficult to estimate as the density function is usually unknown.
These results have also been extended. It is now known that for the pth quartile that the distribution of the sample pth quartile is distributed normally around the pth quartile with variance equal to p( 1 - p ) / f( xp ) where f( xp ) is the value of the distribution at the pth quartile.
- Estimation of variance from sample data
The value of ( 2 f( x ) )-2 - the asymptotic value of n-1/2( ν - m ) where ν is the population median - has been studied by several authors. The standard 'delete one' jackknife method produces inconsistent results.[12] An alternative - the 'delete k' method - where k grows with the sample size has been shown to be asymptotically consistent.[13] This method may be computationally expensive for large data sets. A bootstrap estimate is known to be consistent[14] but converges very slowly ( order of n-1/4 )[15] Other methods have been proposed but their behavior may differ between large and small samples.[16]
- Efficiency
The efficiency of the sample median, measured as the ratio of the variance of the mean to the variance of the median, depends on the sample size and on the underlying population distribution. For a sample of size N = 2n + 1 from the normal distribution, the ratio is[17]
For large samples (as n tends to infinity) this ratio tends to
Other estimators
For univariate distributions that are symmetric about one median, the Hodges–Lehmann estimator is a robust and highly efficient estimator of the population median.[18]
If data are represented by a statistical model specifying a particular family of probability distributions, then estimates of the median can be obtained by fitting that family of probability distributions to the data and calculating the theoretical median of the fitted distribution.[citation needed] Pareto interpolation is an applicaton of this when the population is assumed to have a Pareto distribution.
Coefficient of dispersion
The coefficient of dispersion (CD) is defined as the ratio of the average absolute deviation from the median to the median of the data.[19] It is a statistical measure used by the states of Iowa, New York and South Dakota in estimating dues taxes.[20][21][22] In symbols
where n is the sample size, m is the sample median and x is a variate. The sum is taken over the whole sample.
Confidence intervals for a two sample test where the sample sizes are large have been derived by Bonett and Seier[19] This test assumes that both sames have the same median but differ in the dispersion around it. The confidence interval (CI) is bounded inferiorly by
where tj is the mean absolute deviation of the jth sample, var() is the variance and zα is the value from the normal distribution for the chosen value of α: for α = 0.05, zα = 1.96. The following formulae are used in the derivation of these confidence intervals
where r is the Pearson correlation coefficient between the squared deviation scores
- and
a and b here are constants equal to 1 and 2, x is a variate and s is the standard deviation of the sample.
Multivariate median
Previously, this article discussed the concept of a univariate median for a one-dimensional object (population, sample). When the dimension is two or higher, there are multiple concepts that extend the definition of the univariate median; each such multivariate median agrees with the univariate median when the dimension is exactly one. In higher dimensions, however, there are several multivariate medians.[18]
Marginal median
The marginal median is defined for vectors defined with respect to a fixed set of coordinates. A marginal median is defined to be the vector whose components are univariate medians. The marginal median is easy to compute, and its properties were studied by Puri and Sen.[18][23]
Spatial median (L1 median)
In a normed vector space of dimension two or greater, the "spatial median" minimizes the expected distance
where X and a are vectors, if this expectation has a finite minimum; another definition is better suited for general probability-distributions.[7][18] The spatial median is unique when the data-set's dimension is two or more.[7][8][18] It is a robust and highly efficient estimator of the population spatial-median (also called the "L1 median").[24][18][clarification needed]
Other multivariate medians
An alternative to the spatial median is defined in a similar way, but based on a different loss function, and is called the Geometric median.[citation needed] The centerpoint is another generalization to higher dimensions that does not relate to a particular metric.
Other median-related concepts
Pseudo-median
For univariate distributions that are symmetric about one median, the Hodges–Lehmann estimator is a robust and highly efficient estimator of the population median; for non-symmetric distributions, the Hodges–Lehmann estimator is a robust and highly efficient estimator of the population pseudo-median, which is the median of a symmetrized distribution and which is close to the population median.[citation needed] The Hodges–Lehmann estimator has been generalized to multivariate distributions.[25]
Variants of regression
The Theil–Sen estimator is a method for robust linear regression based on finding medians of slopes.[citation needed]
Median filter
In the context of image processing of monochrome raster images there is a type of noise, known as the salt and pepper noise, when each pixel independently becomes black (with some small probability) or white (with some small probability), and is unchanged otherwise (with the probability close to 1). An image constructed of median values of neighborhoods (like 3×3 square) can effectively reduce noise in this case.[citation needed]
Cluster analysis
In cluster analysis, the k-medians clustering algorithm provides a way of defining clusters, in which the criterion of maximising the distance between cluster-means that is used in k-means clustering, is replaced by maximising the distance between cluster-medians.
Median-unbiased estimators
Any mean-unbiased estimator minimizes the risk (expected loss) with respect to the squared-error loss function, as observed by Gauss. A median-unbiased estimator minimizes the risk with respect to the absolute-deviation loss function, as observed by Laplace. Other loss functions are used in statistical theory, particularly in robust statistics.
The theory of median-unbiased estimators was revived by George W. Brown in 1947:[26]
An estimate of a one-dimensional parameter θ will be said to be median-unbiased, if, for fixed θ, the median of the distribution of the estimate is at the value θ; i.e., the estimate underestimates just as often as it overestimates. This requirement seems for most purposes to accomplish as much as the mean-unbiased requirement and has the additional property that it is invariant under one-to-one transformation. [page 584]
Further properties of median-unbiased estimators have been reported.[27][28][29][30] In particular, median-unbiased estimators exist in cases where mean-unbiased and maximum-likelihood estimators do not exist. Median-unbiased estimators are invariant under one-to-one transformations.
History
The idea of the median originated[citation needed] in Edward Wright's book on navigation (Certaine Errors in Navigation) in 1599 in a section concerning the determination of location with a compass. Wright felt that this value was the most likely to be the correct value in a series of observations.
In 1757 Roger Joseph Boscovich developed a regression method based on the L1 norm and therefore implicitly on the median.[31]
The distribution of both the sample mean and the sample median were determined by Laplace in the early 1800s.[10][32]
Antoine Augustin Cournot in 1843 was the first[citation needed] to use the term median (valeur médiane) for the value that divides a probability distribution into two equal halves. Gustav Theodor Fechner used the median (Centralwerth) in sociological and psychological phenomena.[33] It had earlier been used only in astronomy and related fields. Gustav Fechner popularized the median into the formal analysis of data, although it had been used previously by Laplace.[33]
Francis Galton used the English term median in 1881,[34] having earlier used the terms middle-most value in 1869 and the medium in 1880.[citation needed]
See also
- A median is the 2nd quartile, 5th decile, and 50th percentile
- A sample-median is median-unbiased but can be a mean-biased estimator
- Absolute deviation
- Concentration of measure for Lipschitz functions
- Median voter theory
- Median graph
- Median search
References
- ^ a b Weisstein, Eric W. "Statistical Median". MathWorld.
- ^ http://www.stat.psu.edu/old_resources/ClassNotes/ljs_07/sld008.htm Simon, Laura J.; "Descriptive statistics", Statistical Education Resource Kit, Pennsylvania State Department of Statistics
- ^ Stroock, Daniel (2011). Probability Theory. Cambridge University Press. p. 43. ISBN 978-0-521-13250-3.
- ^ http://www.se16.info/hgb/cheb2.htm#3unimodalinequalities
- ^ Mallows, Colin (1991). "Another comment on O'Cinneide". The American Statistician. 45 (3): 257.
{{cite journal}}
: Unknown parameter|month=
ignored (help) - ^ Piché, Robert (2012). Random Vectors and Random Sequences. Lambert Academic Publishing. ISBN 978-3659211966.
- ^ a b c Kemperman, Johannes H. B. (1987). Dodge, Yadolah (ed.). "Statistical data analysis based on the L1-norm and related methods: Papers from the First International Conference held at Neuchâtel, August 31–September 4, 1987". Amsterdam: North-Holland Publishing Co.: 217–230. MR 0949228.
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(help) - ^ a b Milasevic, Philip; Ducharme, Gilles R. (1987). "Uniqueness of the spatial median". Annals of Statistics. 15 (3): 1332–1333. MR 0902264.
{{cite journal}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - ^ Merkle M (2005) Jensen’s inequality for medians. Statistics & Probability Letters 71: 277–281
- ^ a b Stigler, Stephen (1973). "Studies in the History of Probability and Statistics. XXXII: Laplace, Fisher and the Discovery of the Concept of Sufficiency". Biometrika. 60 (3): 439–445. doi:10.1093/biomet/60.3.439. JSTOR 2334992. MR 0326872.
{{cite journal}}
: Unknown parameter|month=
ignored (help) Cite error: The named reference "Stigler1973" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page). - ^ Rider, Paul R. (1960) "Variance of the median of small samples from several special populations". Journal of the American Statistical Association, 55 (289) 148–150
- ^ Efron B(1982) The jackknife, the bootstrap and other resampling plans. SIAM, Philadelphia
- ^ Shao J, Wu CF (1989) A general theory for jackknife variance estimation. Ann Statis 17: 1176-1197
- ^ Efron B (1979) Bootstrap methods: another look at the jackknife. Ann Statist 7: 126
- ^ Hall P, Martin MA (1988) Exact convergence rate of bootstrap quantile variance estimator. Probab Theory Related Fields 80: 261-268
- ^ Jimenez-Gamero MD, Munoz-Garcıa J, R. Pino-Mejıas (2004)Reduced bootstrap for the median. Statistica Sinica 14, 1179-1198
- ^ Kenney JF, Keeping ES (1962) The Median pp 211-212. Mathematics of Statistics, Pt. 1, 3rd ed. Princeton, NJ. Van Nostrand
- ^ a b c d e f Hettmansperger, Thomas P.; McKean, Joseph W. (1998). Robust nonparametric statistical methods. Kendall's Library of Statistics. Vol. 5 (First ed., rather than Taylor and Francis (2010) second ed.). New York: Edward Arnold. pp. xiv+467. ISBN 0-340-54937-8, 0-471-19479-4. MR 1604954.
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ignored (help) - ^ a b Bonett DG, Seier E (2006) Confidence interval for a coefficient of dispersion in non-normal distributions. Biometrical Journal 48 (1) 144-148
- ^ http://www.iowa.gov/tax/locgov/Statistical_Calculation_Definitions.pdf
- ^ http://www.tax.ny.gov/research/property/reports/cod/2010mvs/reporttext.htm
- ^ http://www.state.sd.us/drr2/publications/assess1199.pdf
- ^ Puri, Madan L.; Sen, Pranab K.; Nonparametric Methods in Multivariate Analysis, John Wiley & Sons, New York, NY, 197l. (Reprinted by Krieger Publishing)
- ^ Vardi, Yehuda; and Zhang, Cun-Hui; The multivariate l1-median and associated data depth, in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 97 (2000), no. 4, 1423–1426
- ^ Oja, Hannu (2010). Multivariate nonparametric methods with R: An approach based on spatial signs and ranks. Lecture Notes in Statistics. Vol. 199. New York, NY: Springer. pp. xiv+232. doi:10.1007/978-1-4419-0468-3. ISBN 978-1-4419-0467-6. MR 2598854.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - ^ Brown, George W. (1947) "On Small-Sample Estimation." The Annals of Mathematical Statistics, 18 (4),582–585
- ^ Lehmann, Erich L. (1951) "A General Concept of Unbiasedness" The Annals of Mathematical Statistics, 22 (4), 587–592.
- ^ Birnbaum, Allan (1961) "A Unified Theory of Estimation, I", The Annals of Mathematical Statistics, 32 (1), 112–135
- ^ van der Vaart, H. Robert (1961) "Some Extensions of the Idea of Bias", The Annals of Mathematical Statistics, 32 (2), 436–447.
- ^ Pfanzagl, Johann; with the assistance of R. Hamböker (1994). Parametric Statistical Theory. Walter de Gruyter. ISBN 3-11-013863-8. MR 1291393.
- ^ Stigler SM (1986) The history of statistics: The measurement of uncertainty before 1900. Harvard University Press
- ^ Laplace PS de (1818) Deuxième supplément à la Théorie Analytique des Probabilités, Paris, Courcier
- ^ a b Keynes, J.M. (1921) A Treatise on Probability. Pt II Ch XVII §5 (p 201) (2006 reprint, Cosimo Classics, ISBN 9781596055308 : multiple other reprints)
- ^ Galton F (1881) "Report of the Anthropometric Committee" pp 245-260. Report of the 51st Meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science
External links
- "Median (in statistics)", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press, 2001 [1994]
- A Guide to Understanding & Calculating the Median
- Median as a weighted arithmetic mean of all Sample Observations
- On-line calculator
- Calculating the median
- A problem involving the mean, the median, and the mode.
- Weisstein, Eric W. "Statistical Median". MathWorld.
- Python script for Median computations and income inequality metrics
This article incorporates material from Median of a distribution on PlanetMath, which is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.