Waiting
Elaborazione accesso...

Trial ends in Request Full Access Tell Your Colleague About Jove

8.2: Degrees of Freedom

TABLE OF
CONTENTS
JoVE Core
Statistics

È necessario avere un abbonamento a JoVE per visualizzare questo Contenuto.

Education
Degrees of Freedom
 
TRANSCRIPT

8.2: Degrees of Freedom

The degree of freedom for a particular statistical calculation is the number of values that are free to vary. Thus, the minimum number of independent numbers can specify a particular statistic. The degrees of freedom differ greatly depending on known and uncalculated statistical components.

For example, suppose there are three unknown numbers whose mean is 10; although we can freely assign values to the first and second numbers, the value of the last number can not be arbitrarily assigned. Since the first two are independent, with the third one dependent, the dataset is said to have two degrees of freedom. In many statistical methods, the number of degrees of freedom is usually calculated as one minus the sample size. The degrees of freedom have broad applications in calculating standard deviation and statistical estimates in methods such as the Student t distribution and the Chi-Square distribution tests.

Tags

Degree Of Freedom Statistical Calculation Independent Numbers Known Statistical Components Uncalculated Statistical Components Mean Dataset Sample Size Standard Deviation Statistical Estimates Student T Distribution Chi-Square Distribution Tests

Get cutting-edge science videos from JoVE sent straight to your inbox every month.

Waiting X
Simple Hit Counter