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Quartile Coefficient of Dispersion
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The interquartile range (Q3 - Q1) gives a measure of the spread of the data. For example, if the diameter of small trees were measured, the interquartile range could be 0.3m - 0.1m = 0.2m. If large trees were measured, the interquartile range could be 2.3m -2.1m = 0.2m. Each of these answers is the same, but the large trees would appear to be of a much more uniform diameter.
Using this to calculate the quartile coefficient of dispersion (Q1 - Q3)/(Q3 + Q1) takes the size of the trees into account, so for the small trees it is 0.2/0.4 = 0.5, and the larger trees 0.2/4.4 = 0.045.
Hope this makes sense - the only example I came across on the internet was to do with the quality of asparagus stalks, where a uniform size is considered good so a low coefficient of dispersion is needed.
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