How Can I Mathematically Represent Five Mean Values in a Formula?

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The discussion focuses on formulating a mathematical representation for calculating five mean values based on multiple data sets. The user is attempting to clarify how to express these means mathematically, specifically wanting to show that they have calculated five distinct means, x_1 to x_5, from their experiments. A suggestion is made to use the formula for the average of a set of four values, indicating that the mean for each data set can be represented as x_i = (1/4) * (sum of four values). The conversation emphasizes the need to clearly denote each mean while ensuring the formula accurately reflects the calculations performed across the five sets of data. The user seeks confirmation that their approach makes sense in the context of their experiment.
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Homework Statement



I'm trying to formulate a formula based on an experiment I did.

Homework Equations



The Attempt at a Solution



jOQRNgZ.jpg
[/B]

where

x_1 = mean (one of 5 mean values)
x_i = value of variables (there are 4 of them added together)
n = number of variables

My problem is, for the left hand side of the formula, I want to show that there are 5 means, so x_1 to x_5 = the right hand side as shown

I'm not sure how to show this mathematically.

Wonder if anyone might be able to help.

Thanks.
 
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random39a said:

Homework Statement



I'm trying to formulate a formula based on an experiment I did.

Homework Equations



The Attempt at a Solution



jOQRNgZ.jpg
[/B]

where

x_1 = mean (one of 5 mean values)
x_i = value of variables (there are 4 of them added together)
n = number of variables
I don't understand what you're doing.
##x_1## is one of the four values in your summation. ##\bar{x_1}## is the mean of the four values. Since your summation runs from 1 to 4, I assume you mean for n to be 4, not 5 as you seem to indicate.
With n = 4, we have ##\bar{x_1} = (1/4)(x_1 + x_2 + x_3 + x_4)##
random39a said:
My problem is, for the left hand side of the formula, I want to show that there are 5 means, so x_1 to x_5 = the right hand side as shown
?
For the four numbers you're adding, there is only one mean.
 
Mark44 said:
I don't understand what you're doing.
##x_1## is one of the four values in your summation. ##\bar{x_1}## is the mean of the four values. Since your summation runs from 1 to 4, I assume you mean for n to be 4, not 5 as you seem to indicate.
With n = 4, we have ##\bar{x_1} = (1/4)(x_1 + x_2 + x_3 + x_4)##
?
For the four numbers you're adding, there is only one mean.
Thanks for reply.

I'm just trying to let the person who reads the formula know that I have used this formula to calculate 5 mean values x_1, x_2, x_3, x_4 and x_5.

eg/

result number one x_1 of 5 results x_5

YELLOW

499

ORANGE

317

PURPLE

545

BLACK

110

AVERAGE

367.75

The data above is one of 5 sets of data for which I have to calculate the mean.

For this data, I calculated the mean using my formula x_1= 1/4 (Sum of Yellow, Orange, Purple, Black) = 367.5

I did this 4 more times with 4 other data sets just like this one.

Does this make sense what I'm trying to do?
 
random39a said:
Thanks for reply.

I'm just trying to let the person who reads the formula know that I have used this formula to calculate 5 mean values x_1, x_2, x_3, x_4 and x_5.

eg/

result number one x_1 of 5 results x_5

YELLOW

499

ORANGE

317

PURPLE

545

BLACK

110

AVERAGE

367.75

The data above is one of 5 sets of data for which I have to calculate the mean.

For this data, I calculated the mean using my formula x_1= 1/4 (Sum of Yellow, Orange, Purple, Black) = 367.5

I did this 4 more times with 4 other data sets just like this one.

Does this make sense what I'm trying to do?
You need something like:
##\bar{x}_i = \frac14 \sum_{j=1}^{4}x_{ij}##

Where ##\bar{x}_i## is the average of the ##i##th set of data ##x_{i1} \dots x_{i4}##
 
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