Simple question about Standard Deviation.

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Helen Kirby
Helen Kirby el 8 de En. de 2017
Comentada: Walter Roberson el 9 de En. de 2017
I have a number of data points, lets say in a vector v, and lets say there are "num" of them. If I write sd = std(v) did it assume a sample i.e. it used num-1 (in the denominator) or did I get a population standard dev i.e. it used num? How can I request one or the other?

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the cyclist
the cyclist el 8 de En. de 2017
Editada: the cyclist el 8 de En. de 2017
By default, it will give the sample standard deviation. Call it as
std(x,1)
to get the population. That is explained in the documentation for std, in the section describing the input argument weight.
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Helen Kirby
Helen Kirby el 8 de En. de 2017
Thank you very much. I did actually look under "doc standard deviation" and couldn't find the answer. But thank you for answering my question.
John BG
John BG el 8 de En. de 2017
look for standard deviation or std

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Helen Kirby
Helen Kirby el 8 de En. de 2017
Could I ask yet another question on this theme - and yes I have read the documentation and it doesn't answer this question. Say if you have x = [1,2,3,4,5,6] and w = [5,7,10,8,12,3] and we want to find the weighted std for a population, how do I write the command for a POPULATION? I understand for a sample it is:
StdSamp = std(x,w) If you put the 1 as the 3rd parameter, it does not interpret it as pop.
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Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson el 9 de En. de 2017
You cannot combine the two weighting schemes.
std(x) is normalized by N-1. std(x,1) is normalized by N. std(x,1) works out to be the same as std(x, ones(size(x)) .
std(x,w,1) means to proceed along dimension 1. Your data was row vectors, so that did not work. But you could use
std(x(:), w(:), 1)
if you had particular reason for wanting to specifically process along the first dimension.

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