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I have several weighted values for which I am taking a weighted average. I want to calculate a weighted standard deviation using the weighted values and weighted average. How would I modify the typical standard deviation to include weights on each measurement?

This is the standard deviation formula I am using.

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When I simply use each weighted value for 'x' and the weighted average for '\bar{x}', the result seems smaller than it should be.

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  • How is this question related to this site? Isn't this belongs to Mathematics SE May 21, 2015 at 22:00
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    @DavidArenburg This is something I am trying to program and likely others have/will also use in the future. I just added more to the answer I posted to identify how to efficiently code this. May 21, 2015 at 22:29

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I just found this wikipedia page discussing data of equal significance vs weighted data. The correct way to calculate the biased weighted estimator of variance is

,

though the following, on-the-fly implementation, is more efficient computationally as it does not require calculating the weighted average before looping over the sum on the weighted differences squared

.

Despite my skepticism, I tried both and got the exact same results.

Note, be sure to use the weighted average

.

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    Note that the mean is also calculated using the weights (i.e. be careful to use the weighted mean in that formula, not the usual unweighted mean). May 21, 2015 at 21:24
  • @RobertDodier good point. I did not make that explicit but I will for completeness sake. May 21, 2015 at 23:26
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    That last sentence should say "weighted mean", not "weighted error", right? I suppose the weighted error would be the difference between x_i and this value.
    – akavalar
    Sep 14, 2017 at 3:15

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