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Numeric Data

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Numeric data is not always as simple as it seems. Sometimes numbers represent items rather than giving us a simple count of the value of the items.

We generally have two different subsets of numeric data: one that has a base of absolute zero, for example, numbers that have a defined point of being ‘nothing’, and one that has an arbitrary zero, for example, numbers that rely on the dataset that they are a part of (e.g. in temperature zero degrees Celsius is the same as 32 degrees Fahrenheit, which is the same as -270 degrees Kelvin).

We shall come across both of these types of data that will need to be analysed.

Arbitrary zero = ‘interval scale’ (this could be the same data expressed in different forms, such as temperature, or it could be a rating scale where we rate something on a scale from 1 to 10). Each representation of the data in a numeric format could have a different meaning depending on the type of data set.

Absolute zero = ‘ratio scale’ (this is typical when we are counting quantities of items).

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Can you think of other examples beside temperature and rating scales that could be considered as numeric data with an ‘arbitrary zero’?

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Essential Mathematics for Data Analysis in Microsoft Excel

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