Measurement of Central Tendency and Dispersion

COMPETITIVE EXAM MCQs SERIES of ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE for UGC-NET/JRF, SLETARS, GATE, and other entrance tests –  Statistical Approaches and Modelling in Environmental Sciences: Solid and Hazardous Waste Management: Measurement of Central Tendency and Dispersion.

Syllabus Outline

  1. Mean (e.g., Arithmetic, Geometric, and Harmonic), applications in average pollution concentration, rainfall, and temperature.
  2. Median: Use in skewed data such as income distribution, habitat size.
  3. Mode: Application in categorical and frequency data (e.g., dominant species, land use type).
  4. Comparison of mean, median and mode for data distribution and outliers.
  5. Measures of Dispersion
  6. Range: Simplest measure of spread (e.g., min–max temperature or pollutant level).
  7. Quartiles and Interquartile Range (IQR): Use for ordinal data and outlier detection.
  8. Variance and Standard Deviation: Dispersion in quantitative environmental data.
  9. Coefficient of Variation (CV): Relative measure of dispersion, comparison across datasets.

This quiz contains concept-basedmost frequently asked 25 MCQs of “Statistical Approaches and Modelling in Environmental Sciences: Measurement of Central Tendency and Dispersion“. Each question has a single correct/most appropriate answer.

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1. Which measure of central tendency is most appropriate when dealing with highly skewed pollution concentration data?

A) Arithmetic mean

B) Median

C) Mode

D) Geometric mean

Answer: B)

2. The coefficient of variation is particularly useful in environmental science because it:

A) Measures absolute dispersion only

B) Allows comparison of variability between datasets with different units

C) Is always less than the standard deviation

D) Cannot be used for non-normal distributions

Answer: B)

3. Which measure of dispersion is least affected by extreme values in air quality monitoring data?

A) Range

B) Standard deviation

C) Variance

D) Interquartile range

Answer: D)

4. The harmonic mean is most appropriately used in environmental science for calculating:

A) Average pollution concentrations

B) Average rates or speeds

C) Central tendency of categorical data

D) Dispersion measures

Answer: B)

5. Which statistical measure provides information about the shape of the distribution of environmental data?

A) Standard deviation

B) Variance

C) Skewness

D) Range

Answer: C)

6. The geometric mean is preferred over the arithmetic mean when analysing:

A) Temperature variations

B) Bacterial growth rates

C) Linear relationships

D) Additive processes

Answer: B)

7. The most appropriate measure of central tendency for ordinal environmental data (like pollution severity levels) is:

A) Arithmetic mean

B) Geometric mean

C) Median

D) Harmonic mean

Answer: C)

8. A researcher studying water quality parameters finds that the mean pH is 7.2 with a standard deviation of 0.8. If the data follows a normal distribution, approximately what percentage of observations fall between pH 6.4 and 8.0?

A) 68%

B) 95%

C) 99.7%

D) 50%

Answer: A)

9. In environmental impact assessment, when comparing the variability of NOx emissions from two different industrial sources with means of 45 mg/m³ and 120 mg/m³, respectively, which statistical measure would be most appropriate?

A) Standard deviation

B) Variance

C) Coefficient of variation

D) Range

Answer: C)

10. For a right-skewed distribution of heavy metal concentrations in soil samples, which statement is most likely true?

A) Mean < Median < Mode

B) Mean > Median > Mode

C) Mean = Median = Mode

D) Mode > Mean > Median

Answer: B)

11. An environmental consultant needs to report the “typical” groundwater contamination level from a dataset with several extreme outliers. The most robust measure would be:

A) Arithmetic mean

B) Weighted mean

C) Median

D) Mode

Answer: C)

12. The interquartile range (IQR) is calculated as:

A) Q3 – Q1

B) Q2 – Q1

C) Q3 – Q2

D) Maximum – Minimum

Answer: A)

13. For environmental data with a mean of 50 mg/L and a median of 35 mg/L, the distribution is:

A) Positively skewed

B) Negatively skewed

C) Perfectly symmetric

D) Bimodal

Answer: A)

14. When calculating the geometric mean of bacterial colony counts (2, 8, 32, 128), the result is:

A) 42.5

B) 16

C) 8

D) 10.6

Answer: B)

15. In quality control of environmental monitoring, control limits are typically set at:

A) Mean ± 1 standard deviation

B) Mean ± 2 standard deviations

C) Mean ± 3 standard deviations

D) Median ± 1 standard deviation

Answer: C)

16. In comparing two environmental datasets, if Dataset A has a higher coefficient of variation than Dataset B, it means:

A) Dataset A has higher absolute variability

B) Dataset A has higher relative variability

C) Dataset A has a higher mean

D) Dataset A has more observations

Answer: B)

17. The trimmed mean is calculated by:

A) Removing the highest and lowest values

B) Removing a specified percentage of extreme values from both ends

C) Averaging only the middle 50% of values

D) Weighing values by their frequency

Answer: B)

18. For log-normally distributed environmental data, the most appropriate measure of central tendency is:

A) Arithmetic mean of raw data

B) Geometric mean of raw data

C) Median of raw data

D) Mode of raw data

Answer: B)

19. The mean absolute deviation is less sensitive to outliers compared to:

A) Median

B) Mode

C) Standard deviation

D) Interquartile range

Answer: C)

20. In environmental epidemiology, when exposure data is highly skewed, researchers often:

A) Use the arithmetic mean for analysis

B) Transform data using logarithms

C) Ignore the outliers

D) Use only the mode

Answer: B)

21. For environmental monitoring networks, the root mean square (RMS) is particularly useful for:

A) Measuring central tendency

B) Comparing measurement errors

C) Determining sample size

D) Testing normality

Answer: B)

22. An environmental scientist is analysing ozone concentrations from multiple monitoring stations. The data shows: Station A (Mean: 85 ppb, CV: 25%), Station B (Mean: 120 ppb, CV: 20%), Station C (Mean: 95 ppb, CV: 30%). Which is correct according to absolute variability?

A) Station C > Station A > Station B

B) Station C > Station B > Station A

C) Station B > Station C > Station A

D) Cannot be determined

Answer: B)

23. The concept of “effective sample size” in environmental autocorrelated time series is important because:

A) It determines the true degrees of freedom

B) It measures central tendency

C) It calculates dispersion

D) It eliminates outliers

Answer: A)

24. In environmental quality assessment, the weighted mean is most appropriately used when:

I – All measurements have equal importance

II – Measurements have different uncertainties or importance

III – Data is normally distributed

IV – Sample size is large

A) I only

B) II Only

C) II and III

D) II, III and IV

Answer: B)

25. The concept of “breakdown point” in robust environmental statistics refers to:

A) The minimum sample size needed

B) The fraction of outliers an estimator can handle

C) The maximum variance allowed

D) The confidence level required

Answer: B)

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References

  1. Gupta, S.P. (2020) Statistical Methods, Sultan Chand & Sons, 44th edition.
  2. Barnett, V. (2004) Environmental Statistics: Methods and Applications, Wiley, 1st edition.
  3. Manly, B.F.J. (2008) Statistics for Environmental Science and Management, Chapman and Hall/CRC, 2nd edition.
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