What is a Histogram?
A histogram can be defined as a graphical presentation of the distribution pattern of the data. It has a bar chart that shows the frequency of data in the specific bins or the intersectional periods in a graphical format. The x-axis shows the values, and the y-axis illustrates the frequency or count of occurrences inside each interval. Histograms can detect different patterns, trends, and outliers in the gathered data.
Right Skewed Histogram
Right-skewed histogram is a graph showing the distribution of the data that is skewed to the right end, which means the tail of the graph is around the right side. Interpreting this type of histogram is crucial because it helps understand data distribution. In a right-skewed histogram, the bulk of the data points are settled on the left side, whereas a few extreme values drag the tail on the right. In the following article, we will learn the concept of histograms with a more narrow focus on right-skewed histograms for normal distributions.
Table of Content
- What is a Histogram?
- What is a Right-Skewed Histogram?
- How to Identify a Right-Skewed Histogram
- Interpretation of a Right-Skewed Histogram
- Mean, Median, and Mode in a Right Skewed Histogram
- How to Calculate Mean, Median, and Mode in a Right Skewed Histogram?
- Right Skewed Vs Left Skewed Histogram
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