On Tuesday, July 28, 2009 at 5:08:21 PM UTC-7, Walt987 wrote:
I've been told it is reasonable to add the averages of several groups to get the "total mean" (for lack of a better word) of the groups. For example you could add the average abundance of several species of fish to get a total abundance value for all
species. I have three questions about this procedure:
1) Does it make sense and if so could someone explain in words what it means and how it is used?
2) Is there a term for this value?
3) I found a procedure on a web page for calculating the standard deviation (not additive) of this value but this raised a new question - how does it make sense to have a standard deviation for a total?
4) If it makes sense so far, is there a way to calculate standard error for this value?
5) If this value is not a mean, can it be used in statistical tests?
Thanks for any help.
If you own a store and the average cost of the shoes you buy to stock your store is $50 and the average cost of the clothes you buy for your store is $46 then the total average cost of the clothes AND shoes you buy for the store is $50+$46=$96. (This is
the case where you can add averages.)
You cannot add averages if for example your one class got an average of 50% on their test and you have another class that got 75% on their test, you can't add their averages and say the combined average for your two classes is 50% +75%=125%. (It doesn't
make sense to add averages in this case)
Let me know what you think...
--- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
* Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)