this post was submitted on 08 Aug 2024
133 points (100.0% liked)
And Finally...
1118 readers
35 users here now
A place for odd or quirky world news stories.
Elsewhere in the Fediverse:
- !weirdnews@real.lemmy.fan
- !offbeat@lemmy.ca
- !nottheonion@lemmy.world
- !nottheonion@lemmy.ml
- !nottheonion@zerobytes.monster
- !aiop@lemmy.world
- !jingszo@lemmy.world
- !forteana@feddit.uk
- !strangetimes@lemmy.world
- !goodnews@feddit.uk
- !upliftingnews@lemmy.world
Rules:
- Be excellent to each other
- The Internet will resurface old "And finally..." material. Just mark it [VINTAGE]
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
And before anyone barges in saying "that's not how averages work", first of all you mean the, uh, mean – both the mean and the median are averages.
Second, intelligence probably follows a distribution that's reasonably close to Gaussian (at least on a smaller scale) just like more or less literally all biological variables do. And I don't mean IQ, but the general idea that cognitive performance – however the hell you define it – is going to vary from person to person and it's going to approximately follow a Gaussian curve. The upshot of this is that the median is probably very close to the mean.
Thanks for expanding on that. Can you say something about the difference between a bell curve and a gaussian curve?
Oh there's no difference, "bell curve" is just a more colloquial term for a normal distribution. "Normal distribution", "Gaussian distribution / curve" and "bell curve" all mean the same thing.
Wouldn't be math if there wasn't 736 different names for the same thing 😆
Oh sorry, I quick read over the first sentence and missed it. Long day yesterday!