1.7:

Standard Deviation of Calculated Results

JoVE Core
Analytical Chemistry
A subscription to JoVE is required to view this content.  Sign in or start your free trial.
JoVE Core Analytical Chemistry
Standard Deviation of Calculated Results

3,140 Views

01:14 min

April 04, 2024

Standard deviation measures the spread of data around the mean value. Many large data sets follow a Gaussian distribution, also known as a normal distribution. This distribution is bell-shaped curved, with the most frequently observed value (mean or central value) in the middle. The farther away from the central value, the greater the deviation from the central value, and the lower the frequency.

A broad Gaussian distribution curve has a wider standard deviation, representing a data set with lower precision. For data with high precision, the magnitude of the standard deviation is small, and the width of the distribution curve is narrow.

The mean and standard deviation of the entire data or population are known as the population mean and population standard deviation, respectively. The standard deviation for a population subset is the sample standard deviation, and the estimated mean of the subset is known as the sample mean. A useful way to express the standard deviation is the 'relative standard deviation', which expresses the standard deviation as a fraction of the mean. This quantity is also known as the coefficient of variation and is often expressed as a percentage.