Thanks to visit codestin.com
Credit goes to www.scribd.com

0% found this document useful (0 votes)
26 views3 pages

Unit 4 Business Analytics Notes

Unit 4 of the Business Analytics Course covers various data visualization techniques including histograms, bar charts, box plots, line graphs, and scatter plots, detailing their definitions, features, and practical applications. It also discusses measures of central tendency and dispersion, as well as the differences between covariance and correlation, and introduces the coefficient of determination (R²) for evaluating model fit. The unit emphasizes the importance of these tools in analyzing and interpreting data effectively.

Uploaded by

Aliza
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
26 views3 pages

Unit 4 Business Analytics Notes

Unit 4 of the Business Analytics Course covers various data visualization techniques including histograms, bar charts, box plots, line graphs, and scatter plots, detailing their definitions, features, and practical applications. It also discusses measures of central tendency and dispersion, as well as the differences between covariance and correlation, and introduces the coefficient of determination (R²) for evaluating model fit. The unit emphasizes the importance of these tools in analyzing and interpreting data effectively.

Uploaded by

Aliza
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 3

Unit 4: Data Visualization and Descriptive Statistics

Business Analytics Course Notes

Prepared by: Grok 3 (xAI)

Date: May 15, 2025

Unit 4 - Topics and Answers

1. What are the Various Graphs and Charts, Their Features, Practical Application

Histogram:

Definition: A chart showing the frequency distribution of a continuous variable.

Features: Represents continuous data; bars touch; height of bars shows frequency; bin size adjustable.

Practical Application: Analyze data distribution. E.g., sales range detection.

Use Case: Understand customer behavior, assess sales trends.

Bar Chart:

Definition: Displays categorical data with bars.

Features: Categorical variables; gaps between bars; vertical/horizontal; grouped comparisons.

Practical Application: Compare sales across categories or time.

Use Case: Summarize sales by product, employee performance, preferences.

Box Plot:

Definition: Summarizes distribution using five-number summary.

Features: Shows median, IQR, outliers; ideal for group comparisons.

Practical Application: Spot variability and outliers in data.

Use Case: Compare distributions, assess ranges, detect anomalies.


Line Graph:

Definition: Plots data points connected by lines over time.

Features: Continuous data; shows trends; can have multiple lines.

Practical Application: Track trends, forecast values.

Use Case: Monitor growth, stock trends, campaign performance.

Scatter Plot:

Definition: Plots individual points for two continuous variables.

Features: Reveals relationships, patterns, clusters.

Practical Application: Examine variable relationships, detect outliers.

Use Case: Analyze spending patterns, demand relations.

2. Differences Between Various Charts

Data Type: Histogram (continuous), Bar (categorical), Box (continuous), Line (time series), Scatter (2

continuous).

Purpose: Histogram (distribution), Bar (comparison), Box (summary), Line (trend), Scatter (relationship).

Visuals: Histogram (adjacent bars), Bar (gapped bars), Box (box & whiskers), Line (lines), Scatter (points).

Use Case: Histogram (data spread), Bar (group compare), Box (outlier detect), Line (time trends), Scatter

(correlations).

3. Scatter Plot Details

Definition: Plots x and y values to show relationships.

Features: Shows trends, outliers, clusters; can include trend lines.

Use: Explore correlations, detect anomalies, support modeling.

Application: Ad spend vs. sales, price vs. demand, productivity.

4. Measures of Central Tendency


Mean: Average; affected by outliers.

Median: Middle value; robust to outliers.

Mode: Most frequent; best for categorical data.

Application: Estimate averages, identify common behaviors.

5. Measures of Dispersion

Variance: Average squared deviation; shows spread.

Standard Deviation: Square root of variance; intuitive.

Application: Evaluate consistency, risk, reliability.

6. Covariance vs. Correlation

Covariance: Direction of variable movement; not standardized; unbounded.

Correlation: Strength and direction; standardized; -1 to +1.

Use: Covariance for movement direction; Correlation for strength and comparison.

7. Coefficient of Determination (R²)

Definition: Proportion of variance explained by a model.

Features: Ranges from 0 to 1; higher is better fit; used in regression.

Use: Evaluate model fit, select variables, assess predictability.

Application: Predict sales, analyze cost drivers, report model performance.

You might also like