Percentile: Difference between revisions

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imported>Peter Schmitt
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imported>Peter Schmitt
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             P(\omega\ge x_2) = 1-{k\over100}  </math>
             P(\omega\ge x_2) = 1-{k\over100}  </math>
Then every value in the (closed) intervall between the smallest and the largest such value  
Then every value in the (closed) intervall between the smallest and the largest such value  
<math> \left [ \min \{ x \mid P(\omega\le x) = {k\over100} \},
: <math> \left [ \min \left\{ x \Bigl\vert P(\omega\le x) = {k\over100} \right\},
              \max \[ x \mid P(\omega\ge x) = 1-{k\over100} \} \right]</math>
                \max \left\{ x \Bigl\vert P(\omega\ge x) = 1-{k\over100} \right\} \right]</math>
is a ''k''-th percentiles.
is a ''k''-th percentiles.



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Percentiles are statistical parameters which describe the distribution of a (real) value in a population (or a sample). Roughly speaking, the k-th percentile separates the smallest p percent of values from the largest (100-p) percent.

Special percentiles are the median (50th percentile), the quartiles (25th and 75th percentile), and the deciles (the k-th decile is the (10k)-th percentile). Percentiles are special cases of quantiles: The k-th percentile is the same as the (k/100)-quantile.

Definition

The value x is k-th percentile if

Special cases

For a continuous distribution (like the normal distribution) the k-th percentile x is uniquely determined by

In the general case (e.g., for discrete distributions, or for finite samples) it may happen that the separating value has positive probability:

or that there are two distinct values for which equality holds such that

Then every value in the (closed) intervall between the smallest and the largest such value

is a k-th percentiles.

Example

The following examples illustrates this:

Take a sample of 101 values, ordered according to their size:

Then the unique k-th percentile is .

If there are only 100 values

then any value between and is a k-th percentile.