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In a normal distribution the mean, median and mode are all the same value.
For the set 3 4 5 8 5, the mean median and mode all have the same value.
All three increase by that same value.
Mean, median, and mode are all equal in a normal distribution.
Yes. For example, in the sequence {1,2,2,2,2,3,4,7} 2 is the median, and 2 is also the mode.
In a normal distribution the mean, median and mode are all the same value.
For the set 3 4 5 8 5, the mean median and mode all have the same value.
All three increase by that same value.
Mean, median, and mode are all equal in a normal distribution.
Your single number is your only information of the median value of the population, so the median value is the same as your single number. It is also the mode and mean of your sample.
Yes. For example, in the sequence {1,2,2,2,2,3,4,7} 2 is the median, and 2 is also the mode.
2, 2, 5, 7, 9, 11. Mean = Median = 6 Mode = 2
(10,10,30,30,30,50,50) (20,20,30,30,30,40,40) These two sets have the same mean, median and mode.
The mean, the median, the mode and the upper and lower limits of the range would each be reduced by the amount subtracted.
In a symmetric distribution, the mean and the median are the same. Otherwise there is no relation. In symmetric distributions with only one mode, the mode will coincide with the mean and median, but otherwise there is no relation.
No. Normal distribution is uni-modal, specifically with the mean, mode, and median at the same value.
The mean, median, and mode are all measures of central tendency. For symmetrical distributions they all have the same value. For assymetrical distributions they have different values. The mean is the average and the mode is the most likely value.