Biology, asked by yuvraj1221, 1 year ago

Explain the terms Standard error of mean and degrees of freedom.

Answers

Answered by shivanshusingh97
0

The concept of degrees of freedom is central to the principle of estimating statistics of populations from samples of them. "Degrees of freedom" is commonly abbreviated to df.

Think of df as a mathematical restriction that needs to be put in place when estimating one statistic from an estimate of another.

Let us take an example of data that have been drawn at random from a normal distribution. Normal distributions need only two parameters (mean and standard deviation) for their definition; e.g. the standard normal distribution has a mean of 0 and standard deviation (sd) of 1. The population values of mean and sd are referred to as mu and sigma respectively, and the sample estimates are x-bar and s.

In order to estimate sigma, we must first have estimated mu. Thus, mu is replaced by x-bar in the formula for sigma. In other words, we work with the deviations from mu estimated by the deviations from x-bar. At this point, we need to apply the restriction that the deviations must sum to zero. Thus, degrees of freedom are n-1 in the equation for s below:

Standard deviation in a population is:

[x is a value from the population, μ is the mean of all x, n is the number of x in the population, Σ is the summation]

The estimate of population standard deviation.

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