CHAPTER 9 Summarizing and Graphing Your Data 127

Box-and-whiskers charts

The box-and-whiskers plot (or B&W, or just box plot) plot uses very little space to

display a lot of information about the distribution of numbers in one or more

groups of participants. A box plot of the same enzyme data used in Figure 9-7 is

shown in Figure 9-8a.

Looking at Figure 9-8a, you notice the box plot for each group has the following

parts:»

» A box spanning the interquartile range (IQR), extending from the first quartile

of the variable to the third quartile, thus encompassing the middle 50 percent

of the data.»

» A thick horizontal line, drawn at the median, which is also the 50th centile. If

this falls in the middle of the box, your data are not skewed, but if it falls on

either side, be on the lookout for skewness.»

» Lines called whiskers extending out to the farthest data point that’s not more

than 1.5 times the IQR away from the box, and terminate with a horizontal bar

on each side.»

» Individual points lying outside the whiskers, which are considered outliers.

Box plots provide a useful visual summary of the distribution of each subgroup for

comparison, as shown in Figure 9-8a. As mentioned earlier, a median that’s not

located near the middle of the box indicates a skewed distribution.

Some software draws the different parts of a box plot according to different rules,

so you should always check your software’s documentation before you present a

box plot so you can describe your box plot accurately.

FIGURE 9-8:

Box-and-whiskers

charts: no-frills (a)

and with variable

width and

notches (b).

© John Wiley & Sons, Inc.