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  2. Grouped data - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grouped_data

    Another method of grouping the data is to use some qualitative characteristics instead of numerical intervals. For example, suppose in the above example, there are three types of students: 1) Below normal, if the response time is 5 to 14 seconds, 2) normal if it is between 15 and 24 seconds, and 3) above normal if it is 25 seconds or more, then the grouped data looks like:

  3. Data binning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_binning

    Data binning, also called data discrete binning or data bucketing, is a data pre-processing technique used to reduce the effects of minor observation errors. The original data values which fall into a given small interval, a bin , are replaced by a value representative of that interval, often a central value ( mean or median ).

  4. Bin (computational geometry) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bin_(computational_geometry)

    The bin data structure. A histogram ordered into 100,000 bins. In computational geometry, the bin is a data structure that allows efficient region queries. Each time a data point falls into a bin, the frequency of that bin is increased by one.

  5. V-optimal histograms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/V-optimal_histograms

    A v-optimal histogram is based on the concept of minimizing a quantity which is called the weighted variance in this context. [1] This is defined as = =, where the histogram consists of J bins or buckets, n j is the number of items contained in the jth bin and where V j is the variance between the values associated with the items in the jth bin.

  6. Discretization of continuous features - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Discretization_of...

    Typically data is discretized into partitions of K equal lengths/width (equal intervals) or K% of the total data (equal frequencies). [1] Mechanisms for discretizing continuous data include Fayyad & Irani's MDL method, [2] which uses mutual information to recursively define the best bins, CAIM, CACC, Ameva, and many others [3]

  7. Histogram - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Histogram

    A histogram is a visual representation of the distribution of quantitative data. To construct a histogram, the first step is to "bin" (or "bucket") the range of values— divide the entire range of values into a series of intervals—and then count how many values fall into each interval.

  8. Constant-Q transform - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Constant-Q_transform

    Given a data series at sampling frequency f s = 1/T, T being the sampling period of our data, for each frequency bin we can define the following: Filter width, δf k. Q, the "quality factor": =. This is shown below to be the integer number of cycles processed at a center frequency f k. As such, this somewhat defines the time complexity of the ...

  9. Frequency (statistics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frequency_(statistics)

    In statistics, the frequency or absolute frequency of an event is the number of times the observation has occurred/been recorded in an experiment or study. [ 1 ] : 12–19 These frequencies are often depicted graphically or tabular form.