Standard error (statistics)



         


In statistics, the standard error of a measurement, value or quantity is the standard deviation of the process by which it was generated.

Standard errors provide simple measures of uncertainty in a value and are often used because:

The standard error of a sample from a population is the standard deviation of the sampling distribution and may estimated by the formula:

<math>\frac{\sigma}{\sqrt{N}}<math>

where <math>\sigma<math> is the standard deviation of the population distribution and N is the size (number of items) in the sample.

A very important implication of this formula is that you must quadruple the sample size (4X) to achieve half (1/2) the measurement error. When designing statistical studies where cost is a factor, this may have a factor in understanding cost-benefit tradeoffs.

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See also

sampling distribution, standard deviation





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