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Quantitative data measures an amount and can be ordered from smallest to largest.
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Categorical data specifies qualities and is not subject to the laws of arithmetic — for example, we cannot take the “average” of a list of colors.
Note: Numbers can be sometimes be categorical rather than quantitative!
For each piece of data below, circle whether it is Categorical or Quantitative data.
1 |
Hair color |
categorical quantitative |
2 |
Age |
categorical quantitative |
3 |
ZIP Code |
categorical quantitative |
4 |
Year |
categorical quantitative |
5 |
Height |
categorical quantitative |
6 |
Sex |
categorical quantitative |
7 |
Street Name |
categorical quantitative |
For each question, circle whether it will be answered by Categorical or Quantitative data.
8 |
We’d like to find out the average price of cars in a lot. |
categorical quantitative |
9 |
We’d like to find out the most popular color for cars. |
categorical quantitative |
10 |
We’d like to find out which puppy is the youngest. |
categorical quantitative |
11 |
We’d like to find out which cats have been fixed. |
categorical quantitative |
12 |
We want to know which people have a ZIP code of 02907. |
categorical quantitative |
13 |
We’d like to sort a list of phone numbers by area code. |
categorical quantitative |
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