A "frequency table" just refers to a kind of table you can make to record the frequency of particular results or events, as part of an experiment or to analyse data. It is convenient to list the possible events or results along the left side of the table, and then make tally marks across from them, in order to count the number of times each one appears; thus, the tally marks represent each event or result's frequency, or the number of times it shows up.
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A=14,b=8
* To find the mean (or average) of a standard frequency table, you must firstly cross-multiply the frequncies with the independent variable in the left column. * Then, add up these products and divide by the total number of frequencies. * For grouped frequency tables, you must find a mid-point, a half-way value in each group, before cross-multiplying.
The fx column in a Frequency Distribution Table is the frequency (f) multiplied by the Class Centre or score (x). If the score is 22. And the freqency for that score is 7. fx = 22*7 = 154 You can use the total of the fx column to find the mean. The total fx divided by the total frequency = Mean.
It is the observed frequency divided by the total number of observations, expressed as a percentage.
In the context of: In the sequence 1,5,8,4,7,2,6,4,8,4,4,4,6,4,4, What number has the highest frequency? It refers to the meaning of what number is most often So the answer is 4 in this case