Logo Questions Linux Laravel Mysql Ubuntu Git Menu
 

What’s the difference between sx and σx in the statistics calculations on a TI-Nspire?

I know that sx is the standard deviation of a sample and σx is the standard deviation of a population. My question is, does the TI-Nspire think that the data I entered is a sample or the population? If it think’s (A) my data is a sample, how is σx calculated? If it thinks (B) my data is the population, how is it taking a “sample”?

I think (A) makes sense and the calculator is somehow estimating a population standard deviation (σx) through some normal distribution approximation.

Possibly ... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unbiased_estimation_of_standard_deviation

However, I can’t find any reference to confirm this and I want to be sure.

Note: Actually using the TI-Nspire CX CAS.

like image 607
lukejanicke Avatar asked Sep 13 '25 21:09

lukejanicke


1 Answers

After cross-checking in Excel and reading Bessel’s correction and Unbiased estimation of standard deviation on Wikipedia …

σx gives the “regular” standard deviation and sx applies Bessel’s correction. In other words, σx is the exact standard deviation of the data given (with n in the denominator), and sx is an unbiased estimation of the standard deviation of a larger population assuming that the data given is only a sample of that population (i.e. with n-1 in the denominator).

like image 192
lukejanicke Avatar answered Sep 17 '25 21:09

lukejanicke