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505-555 (Easy)|   Statistics and Sets Problems|                           
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Video solution from Quant Reasoning:
Subscribe for more: https://www.youtube.com/QuantReasoning? ... irmation=1
General Discussion
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The numbers in A, C, D are close.

B vs E:

For E, two of the deviations are zero
For B, all deviations are 10

So B is the clear choice.
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Is nt there something like The highest std in a set will be something with the highest range. In that case isnt E the answer ? I know the Std will anyway be less in E . But how come this theory is contradicting. Bunuel i used the same logic that u had given for ur statistics qns in ur signature. Kindly explain. !!!
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Is nt there something like The highest std in a set will be something with the highest range. In that case isnt E the answer ? I know the Std will anyway be less in E . But how come this theory is contradicting. Bunuel i used the same logic that u had given for ur statistics qns in ur signature. Kindly explain. !!!
Dear Asac123,

I'm happy to respond. :-)

Please read this post:
Standard Deviation on the GMAT
Give particular attention to the section "Rough and ready facts about standard deviation."

For this question, (B) & (E) both have a range of 20, a larger range than the others, so let's eliminate the other three and discuss these two.

Standard deviation is, we might say, a measure of the "typical" distance between the data points in a set and the mean of the set.

In (E), the mean is 60. Two of the data points are at 60, so they have a deviation of zero, and two are 10 away from 60, so they have deviations of +10 and -10. The set of deviations is {-10, 0, 0, 10}. Ignoring positive/negative, what's the typical size of those four numbers? Hard to say. It would be something between 0 and 10.

Now, look at (B). The mean is 20, and every single data point is exactly a distance of 10 from this mean of 20. If every data point is the same distance from the mean, that distance has to be the S.D. For (B), S.D. = 10.

Since the S.D. of (B) is equal to 10 and the S.D. of (E) would be less than 10, we know that (B) has to have the biggest.

Suppose we want the exact value of the S.D. of (E). This is more than you need to know for the GMAT, but what you would do is square those deviations, add them up, average those squared values, and then take a square root of that average.
list of deviations = {-10, 0, 0, 10}
list of squared deviations = {100, 0, 0, 100}
average of squared deviations = 50
\(S.D. = \sigma = \sqrt{50} = 5\sqrt{2} = 7.071\)

Does all this make sense?
Mike :-)
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You don't need to calculate or solve this one, observe with logic you will be able to eliminate most of the choices.
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In order to answer this question, one has to know the concept of Standard Deviation (SD).
Standard Deviation (SD) is a statistical concept that measures the amount of variation or dispersion of a set of data points.
In other words, SD measures the distance between the MEAN (AVERAGE) of a given set and each and every DATA POINT in a given set. (MEAN - DATA POINT)
Simply, SD tells you how far or how close is the MEAN (AVERAGE) of a given set from each and every DATA POINT in a given set.
SD is moody and it can be HIGH :grin: or it can be LOW :(.
SD is High when the MEAN is far away from each and every DATA POINT in a given set.
SD is Low when the MEAN is close to each and every DATA POINT in a given set.

The question asks for the GREATEST (HIGHEST :grin: ) SD for the number of packages shipped daily at five different companies.
The first step is to find the MEAN for each and every company and then find the highest SD by subtracting the MEAN with each and every DATA POINT
As you can see from the table the figures are "very friendly" and if you are experienced you can do mental math here.

Company A:
DATA POINTS: 45 55 50 50
MEAN: 50
SD: 5 5 0 0

Company B:
DATA POINTS: 10 30 30 10
MEAN: 20
SD: 10 10 10 10

Company C:
DATA POINT: 34 28 28 30
MEAN: 30
SD 4 2 2 0

Company D:
DATA POINTS: 39 42 41 38
MEAN: 40
SD: 1 2 1 2

Company E:
DATA POINTS: 50 60 60 70
MEAN: 60
SD 10 0 0 10

As you can see SD at company B is the highest for each and every DATA POINT (10 10 10 10). Hence, the correct answer is B.
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Hi All,

While this question gives us a table full of data, we’re ultimately asked to think about which of the 5 Companies has the highest Standard Deviation in its data – and the GMAT will NEVER actually ask you to calculate S.D. Understanding the basic concepts behind S.D. are necessary though.

In terms of S.D. on the GMAT, the ‘closer’ a group of numbers is, the smaller the S.D; the more ‘spread out’ a group of numbers is, the higher the S.D. As such, you can answer this question with just a bit of Arithmetic and noting how the groups of numbers compare with one another.

To start, let’s look for groups of numbers that are close together (since those groups would have lower S.D.s and we can quickly eliminate them). Both Company C and Company D both clearly have the two closest groups. Eliminate Answers C and D.

With the 3 remaining groups, notice how Company A and Company E both revolve around a ‘central’ Average. Company A has two 50s, a 45 and a 55 – so the average is 50 and two of the terms differ by just 5 each. Company E has two 60s, a 50 and a 70 – so the average is 60 and two of the terms differ by 10 each. Thus, Company E is far more ‘spread out’ that group A is. Eliminate Answer A.

Company B has two 10s and two 30s, meaning that ALL FOUR terms differ from the Average by 10. That’s a far more spread-out group than the numbers in Company E.

Final Answer:
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Bunuel

The table above shows the number of packages shipped daily by each of the five companies during a 4-day period. The standard deviation of the numbers of packages shipped daily during the period was greatest for which of the five companies?

A) A
B) B
C) C
D) D
E) E

Attachment:
2016-06-17_1615.png
Answer: Option B

Video solution by GMATinsight

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