Statistics is a science dealing with the collection, analysis, interpretation, and presentation of numerical data. (Webster’s Third New International Dictionary)
Statistics can be subdivided into two branches: descriptive statistics and inferential statistics.
Population is a collection of persons, objects, or items of interest.
Census is data gathered from the whole population for a given measurement of interest.
Sample is a portion of the whole and, with statistics, if a sample is properly taken it is representative of the whole.
Descriptive vs. Inferential Statistics
If a business analyst is using data gathered on a group to describe or reach conclusions about that group, the statistics are called descriptive statistics. I.e. if one produces statistics on a subject and then uses those statistics to reach conclusions about that subject only, that is known as descriptive statistics.
Inferential Statistics is when a researcher gathers data from a sample and uses the statistics generated to reach conclusions about the population from which the sample was taken. I.e. the data gathered are used to infer something about a larger group.
A parameter is a descriptive measure of the population. It is a measurement on a population that characterizes one of its features. An example of a parameter is the mode. The mode is the value in the population that occurs most frequently. Other examples of parameters are a population's mean (or average) and its variance.[1]
Parameters are denoted by Greek letters. Examples include:
µ |
population mean |
mu |
σ2 |
population variance |
sigma square |
σ |
population standard deviation |
sigma |