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| GMAT prep SD - DS |
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Ron Purewal
MGMAT STAFF
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Make sure you know that, when ALL numbers in a set are multiplied or divided by some number,** the mean and standard deviation are multiplied/divided by the same number. If you don't see why this should be, consider a set of heights expressed in feet, and then expressed in inches (which is the same thing as saying 'all multiplied by 12'). Since the set contains the same heights, its mean and standard deviation will of course be the same - which means that the mean and standard deviation of the 'inches' set will both be exactly 12 times as big as those of the 'feet' set.
**This includes increasing or decreasing all the numbers in the set by some percentage (which can be accomplished by multiplication: e.g., 30% increase = multiplication by 1.3). Using this principle, statement (1) tells us that both the mean and the standard deviation of the set will decrease by 30%. Therefore, the new standard deviation will decrease to 7 gallons. SUFFICIENT. Statement (2) tells us nothing about standard deviation, which measures SPREAD of numbers. If we achieved the 63 gallons by taking most of the water out of the tanks that were already lowest, then the standard deviation will be huge (because you'll have some tanks almost full and some almost empty). If we got there by taking most of the water out of the fullest tanks, then the standard deviation will be a lot smaller. INSUFFICIENT. So the answer is A. |
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| SD |
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Guest
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Hi Ron,
Your explanations are by far the best available online. I have learnt a lot from your posts. That said, For the above post, is it also true that if we add or substract the numbers by a constant term the SD still remains the same.. I worked with 2,4,6 and 3,5,7 and it gives the same result. But was not sure.. Thanks much.. |
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| Re: SD |
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Ron Purewal
MGMAT STAFF
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correct: if you add the same constant to (or subtract the same constant from) a set of numbers, then the resulting set will have the same standard deviation as did the original set. this is because standard deviation represents spread, and the spread of a set of numbers doesn't change at all when the numbers are all transformed by the same addition/subtraction. (visualize the set on a number line: the transformation does nothing more than silde all the points the same distance to the left or right, a move that won't affect any of the spaces between them.) |
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| GMAT prep SD - DS |
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