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Analyze data dispersion with our comprehensive statistical calculator. Calculate standard deviation, variance, range, and more for your dataset.
Choose from 2 specialized versions of this calculator, each optimized for specific use cases and calculation methods.
The choice depends on your data characteristics and goals. For normally distributed data, standard deviation is usually best. If your data has outliers, consider IQR which is less sensitive to extreme values. For comparing datasets with different units or scales, use coefficient of variation. When presenting to non-technical audiences, range might be easiest to understand. For skewed distributions, consider using percentiles rather than standard deviation.
A high standard deviation indicates that data points are spread out over a wider range from the mean, suggesting greater variability or diversity in your dataset. This could indicate several things depending on context: in investment, it suggests higher risk; in manufacturing, it might indicate quality control issues; in test scores, it might show a wide range of student abilities. Always interpret standard deviation relative to the mean and the nature of what you're measuring.
In a normal distribution, approximately 68% of data falls within one standard deviation of the mean, 95% within two standard deviations, and 99.7% within three standard deviations (the "68-95-99.7 rule"). This predictable relationship makes standard deviation particularly useful for normally distributed data, as it allows probability calculations and statistical inference. If your data follows a normal distribution, standard deviation tells you precisely how data is distributed around the mean.
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