Discrete and Continuous Variables
Discrete and Continuous Variables
Data may come from a population or from a sample. Small letters like x or y generally are used to represent data values. Most data can be put into the following categories: qualitative or quantitative.
Qualitative data are the result of categorizing or describing attributes of a population. Hair color, blood type, ethnic group, the car a person drives, and the street a person lives on are examples of qualitative data. Qualitative data are generally described by words or letters. For instance, hair color might be black, dark brown, light brown, blonde, gray, or red. Blood type might be AB+, O-, or B+. Researchers often prefer to use quantitative data over qualitative data because it lends itself more easily to mathematical analysis. For example, it does not make sense to find an average hair color or blood type.
Quantitative data are always numbers. Quantitative data are the result of counting or measuring attributes of a population. Amount of money, pulse rate, weight, number of people living in your town, and number of students who take statistics are examples of quantitative data. Quantitative data may be either discrete or continuous.
All data that are the result of counting are called quantitative discrete data. These data take on only certain numerical values. If you count the number of phone calls you receive for each day of the week, you might get values such as zero, one, two, or three.
All data that are the result of measuring are quantitative continuous data assuming that we can measure accurately. Measuring angles in radians might result in such numbers as π/6,π/3,π/2,π/3, π/4, and so on. If you and your friends carry backpacks with books in them to school, the numbers of books in the backpacks are discrete data and the weights of the backpacks are continuous data.
For example, imagine that the data are the number of books students carry in their backpacks. You sample five students. Two students carry three books, one student carries four books, one student carries two books, and one student carries one book. The numbers of books (three, four, two, and one) are the quantitative discrete data.
Here is another example: The data are the number of machines in a gym. You sample five gyms. One gym has 12 machines, one gym has 15 machines, one gym has ten machines, one gym has 22 machines, and the other gym has 20 machines. What type of data do you think this is? It is quantitative discrete data.
Below is a video for more examples and an overview of the distinction between discrete and continuous variables.
References
CC LICENSED CONTENT, SHARED PREVIOUSLY
OpenStax, Statistics, Sampling and Data. Located at: http://cnx.org/contents/30189442-6998-4686-ac05-ed152b91b9de@17.44. License: CC BY: Attribution
Statistics: Sources of Bias. Authored by: Mathispower4u. Located at: https://youtu.be/j8sOuCo0ybY. License: CC BY: Attribution
Introductory Statistics . Authored by: Barbara Illowski, Susan Dean. Provided by: Open Stax. Located at: http://cnx.org/contents/30189442-6998-4686-ac05-ed152b91b9de@17.44. License: CC BY: Attribution. License Terms: Download for free at http://cnx.org/contents/30189442-6998-4686-ac05-ed152b91b9de@17.44
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED CONTENT
Sampling Methods. Authored by: StatisticsLectures.com. Located at: http://www.youtube.com/embed/FtZavrh0eaw. License: All Rights Reserved. License Terms: Standard YouTube License