It is the outlier.
Outliers on a modified box plot will be noted away from the ends of the whiskers, as they are not considered part of the range, due to the fact that they are so different from the rest of the data. In a regular box plot, the lowest value, whether it is an outlier or not, will be the beginning of the 1st whisker, the highest value, whether an outlier or not will be the end of the 2nd whisker.
line plot
No, median is not an outlier.
A line plot is just a graph with points and a line graph the points are connected.
If is does not cluster with the other points on a plot. example; the asterik is the outlier ........ ... ...... ...... .. ........ .. ...... ... .. . ...... __________* .. .. . . . . . .. ..
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A number that is different from any other numbers in the data.!
i can not tell you need to space it out and to find outlier try using a box and whisker plot. and if it is just one number there is no outlier
the second median
The outlier is the number in a line plot that is right after the gap, the number that is way far away from all the clusters but sstill has data recorded in it, basically its just the odd one out of the bunch, almost like it doesnt belong or make sense but is true.
An* outlier is a number that is much, much greater or much, much less than all/most of the other points. Basically the one that messes up the average, so usually outliers are counted out when finding the mean of a set.
try this site https.google.com
A cluster is a group of data, or a bunch. A gap is a huge interval. An outlier is a piece of data that is really small or really big.
If it lies on the trend line of the other points then it has no particular name. Otherwise, it may be called an outlier.
The answer will depend on what PLOT A and PLOT B are. But since you have chosen not to provide that information the answer is
The minimum - or outlier-adjusted minimum.