Some examples of statistics are: • "In a recent survey of Americans,
52% of women say global warming is happening." In this case, "52%" is a statistic, namely the percentage of women in the survey sample who believe in global warming. The population is the
set of all women in the United States, and the population parameter being estimated is the percentage of
all women in the United States, not just those surveyed, who believe in global warming. • "The manager of a large hotel located near Disney World indicated that 20 selected guests had a mean length of stay equal to
5.6 days." In this example, "5.6 days" is a statistic, namely the mean length of stay for our sample of 20 hotel guests. The population is the set of all guests of this hotel, and the population parameter being estimated is the mean length of stay for
all guests. Whether the estimator is unbiased in this case depends upon the sample selection process; see
the inspection paradox. There are a variety of functions that are used to calculate statistics. Some include: •
Sample mean,
sample median, and
sample mode •
Sample variance and sample
standard deviation • Sample
quantiles besides the
median, e.g.,
quartiles and
percentiles •
Test statistics, such as
t-statistic,
chi-squared statistic,
f statistic •
Order statistics, including sample maximum and minimum • Sample
moments and functions thereof, including
kurtosis and
skewness • Various
functionals of the
empirical distribution function ==Properties==