Continuous Variable How to Find Median

The median is a measure of central tendency which can be defines as the value that divides a set of observations, ordered from lowest to highest into two parts with the same number of observations, or as the value which divides the data into two parts of equal probability. In this tutorial we will review how to calculate the median in R for both discrete and continuous variables, as well as calculate the median by groups.

  • 1 Median of a discrete variable
  • 2 Median of a continuous variable
  • 3 Median by groups in R

Median of a discrete variable

To calculate the median of a set of observations we can use the median function. Consider the following vector:

          data <- c(126, 52, 133, 104, 115, 67, 57, 83, 53, 105, 100)        

In this case we can see that the median of the data is 100:

          median(data) # 100        

We can check this by sorting the data and seeing that there is the same number of observations at both sides of the median. In this case there are 5 observations on the left and 5 observations on the right.

          plot(1, 1, type = "n", axes = FALSE, ann = FALSE,      xlim = c(0, 11), ylim = c(0, 1)) text(c(1:11), rep(0.5, 10), as.character(sort(data))) rect(xleft = 5.6, ybottom = 0.45, xright = 6.4, ytop = 0.55, border = 2) arrows(x0 = 0.7, y0 = 0.4, x1 = 5, code = 3, length = 0.15) arrows(x0 = 7, y0 = 0.4, x1 = 11, code = 3, length = 0.15) text(c(3, 9), 0.35, "5")        
Median of the data by dividing the data in two equal parts

Note that if the number of observations is odd, the median will be calculated as the average of the two central values. Consider the same data as before except for the last observation:

          data2 <- c(126, 52, 133, 104, 115, 67, 57, 83, 53, 105)        

In this case the median is 93.5:

          median(data2) # 93.5        

The median corresponds to the average of the values 83 and 104, leaving 4 observations on each side, as illustrated in the following figure:

          plot(1, 1, type = "n", axes = T, ann = FALSE,      xlim = c(0, 11), ylim = c(0, 1)) text(c(1:10), rep(0.5, 10), as.character(sort(data2))) rect(xleft = 4.5, ybottom = 0.45, xright = 6.5, ytop = 0.55, border = 2) arrows(x0 = 0.7, y0 = 0.4, x1 = 4.25, code = 3, length = 0.15) arrows(x0 = 6.75, y0 = 0.4, x1 = 10.5, code = 3, length = 0.15) text(c(2.5, 8.5), 0.35, "4") text(5.5, 0.6, "mean(c(83, 104)) = 93.5")        
Median in R with discrete odd data

If the variable contains NA values you can set the argument na.rm to TRUE to delete them.

Median of a continuous variable

If instead of a discrete variable we have a continuous we can also use the median function, but in this case the median is the value that leaves a 50% probability on both sides. Consider the normal distribution with mean 0 and standard deviation 1:

          set.seed(1) data3 <- rnorm(1000)        

In this case we see that the median is very close to its theoretical value (as the distribution is symmetric, the mean and median are equal, so the theoretical median is 0).

          median(data3) # -0.03532423        
Median in R with continuous data

Median by groups in R

Finally, if we have a data set classified by groups we can use the tapply function to calculate the median per group. Take the following data as an example:

          set.seed(1) x <- sample(1:1000, 100) group <- sample(c("A", "B", "C"), 100, replace = TRUE) data4 <- data.frame(x, group)  head(data4)        
                      x    group 1 836     B 2 679     A 3 129     A 4 930     C 5 509     C 6 471     C        

We can apply the tapply function to the data frame in the following way:

          tapply(data4$x, data4$group, median)        
                      A     B     C  543.0 524.0 525.5        

The output will return the median for each group.

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Source: https://r-coder.com/median-r/

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