• Zorque@lemmy.world
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    2 个月前

    The median is an average. There’s generally three types of average, Mean (what you’re talking about), Median (the one they’re talking about), and Mode (the one rarely talked about).

    • passepartout@feddit.org
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      2 个月前

      Sorry for being nitpicky and thanks for naming them all. I just assume the term average is equivalent to mean average in peoples heads. For uneven distributions, like wealth or life expectancy are I assume, mean average in itself just wouldn’t be a useful measurement.

      • Onomatopoeia@lemmy.cafe
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        2 个月前

        Yes, when most people say average, they mean mean. Few people I’ve met know the other concepts even exist.

        • poke@sh.itjust.works
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          2 个月前

          US public schools taught me that mean=average and the others were themselves, not that average describes any process to find a “normal” value. Just throwing that out there so people know why the conversation above happens so frequently.

        • TauZero@mander.xyz
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          2 个月前

          The very wiki article quoted says average to mean mean (made explicit later). OP showerthought was calculating life expectancy in a way different than commonly understood. The first nitpick was correct.

        • TranquilTurbulence@lemmy.zip
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          2 个月前

          Even Excel has a function called “average”, whereas R uses the “mean” function for the same thing. Interestingly, R doesn’t have a function called “average”, because that term is far too ambiguous to statisticians. I think that summarizes pretty well who these tools were made for.