quartile

listen to the pronunciation of quartile
Englisch - Türkisch
{i} kartil [ist.]
kartil
{i} dördün
(Tıp) istatistik grafiklerinde %50 nispetini gösteren ortalamahattın üstünde ve altında bulunan %25 ve %75 nispetlerini gösteren hatlardan biri
quartiles
çeyrek
lower quartile
(İstatistik) birinci kartil
Englisch - Englisch
Any of the three points that divide an ordered distribution into four parts, each containing a quarter of the population
Any one of the four groups so divided

This school is ranked in the first quartile.

{n} an aspect of planets distant one fourth of a circle or 9 degrees
Any one of four equal divisions
One fourth of a sample or population
One quarter range of percentiles; a student with a test placement of 75 or better (out of 100) would be in the first quartile
Same as Quadrate
A value corresponding to a 25% point in a data set The first quartile is the 25th percentile, the second quartile is the 50th percentile, and the third quartile is the 75th percentile
The argument of the cumulative distribution function corresponding to a probability of either 1/4 (first or lower quartile) or 3/4 (third or upper quartile); (of a sample) the value below which occurs a quarter (first or lower quartile) or three-quarters (third or upper quartile) of the observations in the ordered set of observations
A division used in breaking down class rank into fourths Top quartile refers to the top 25 percent of the class; second quartile refers to top 25-50 percent of the class, and so on There are four quartiles
When an ordered set of data is divided into four equal parts, the division points are called quartiles
Segment of a sample representing a sequential quarter (25%) of the group (First 10 out of 40 funds - first quartile, etc )
The value between consecutive intervals in a frequency distribution of four intervals containing one-quarter of the population
The Direct Service Industrial (DSI) customers' load is divided into four quartiles
A quantile that separates one quarter of the values in a distribution from the remaining three quarters
One of a set of numbers (a quantile) on the random-variable axis that divides a probability distribution into four equal areas The three quartile points that lie between the extremes of the distribution are designated as Q1, Q2, Q3 and are defined in terms of the distribution function F(x) as follows: Thus, Q2 coincides with the median In empirical relative frequency tables, the quartiles are estimated by interpolation The interquartile range 2Q is the distance from Q1 to Q3; half of this distance Q is called the semi-interquartile range (or quartile deviation) and is sometimes used as a crude measure of variability or spread
Each of four portions of the direct-service industry load Determines BPA terms of delivery, with 25 percent of the load (called the top, or first, quartile) served as interruptible load and 75 percent considered firm load (but interruptible under specified circumstances to provide planning and operating reserve)
(statistics) any of three points that divide an ordered distribution into four parts each containing one quarter of the scores
Investment surveys rank investment managers according to the investment performance of their products Managers in the top quarter of those participating in the survey are said to be "top quartile performers" Similarly, an investment manger's performance may fall in the second, third or fourth quartile, or by simply "above average" (quarters one and two combined)
lower quartile
The quartile (designated Q1) having the lowest value; it cuts off the lowest 25% of data
upper quartile
The median of the upper or highest half of a data set, especially of a sample, population, or probability distribution
quartiles
Statistics which divide the observations in a numeric sample into 4 intervals, each containing 25% of the data The lower, middle, and upper quartiles are computed by ordering the data from smallest to largest and then finding the values below which fall 25%, 50%, and 75% of the data The middle quartile is usually called the median Quartiles are special cases of percentiles The lower quartile, median, and upper quartile are the same as the 25th, 50th, and 75th percentiles Box and whisker plots provide a graphical summary of a data sample in terms of its quartiles Upper and lower quartiles are calculated in the One Variable Analysis procedure
quartiles
The points which break the distribution into fourths
quartiles
Three values that divide the total frequency of a set of data into four equal parts The central value is called the median and the other two are called the upper and lower quartiles, respectively
quartiles
The 25th, 50th, and 75th percentiles, referred to as the first quartile, the second quartile (median), and third quartile, respectively The quartiles can be used to divide the data set into four parts, with each part containing approximately 25% of the data
quartiles
There are several definitions used to calculate quartiles, which will result in different values, especially for small data sets But this entry is included to stress that present usage defines quartiles as values (cutoffs), not ranges There is no fourth quartile, a person in the top fourth of the class is above the third quartile, not in the fourth quartile Data is above, below, or at a quartile, not in a quartile
quartiles
the quartiles mark out the middle half of the data The first quartile lies one quarter of the way up the list, and is thus larger than 25% of the observations The third quartile lies three-quarters of the way up the list, and is thus larger than 75% of the observations The second quartile is the median, which is larger than 50% of the observations
quartiles
There are four quartiles within each floating bar, and each is broken into a 25% tier, totaling 100% The upper or first quartile indicates the top 25% of the managers in your universe with the second quartile representing the next 25%, and so on
quartiles
Scores that divide all the scores into four quarters One fourth of the data values are equal to less than the first or lower quartile (Q1), one half of the values are equal to or less than the 2nd quartile (Q2, also known as the median), and three fourths of all the data values are equal to or less than the third or upper quartile (Q3)
quartiles
May be used to divide the scale of measurement into 4 larger units The first quartile is the same as the 25th percentile
quartiles
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