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16 September, 21:23

What is the difference between a histogram and a cumulative histogram?

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  1. 16 September, 23:34
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    Answer: The answer is provided below

    Step-by-step explanation:

    A histogram is a diagram which consist of rectangles whereby the area is proportional to frequency of a variable and the width is equal to class interval. A histogram is a commonly used graph that is used to show frequency distributions.

    The cumulative histogram is a histogram whereby the vertical axis doesn't gives only the counts for a single bin, but gives the counts for that bin and all the bins for the maller values of a response variable.

    Cumulative histograms are similar to normal histograms, but the main difference is that they graph cumulative frequencies unlike histograms that graph just frequencies.
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