mittaarvona
Mittaarvona is a statistical concept found in some Estonian-language texts to describe a measure of central tendency that blends the arithmetic mean and the median. The term is formed from elements meaning “middle” and “value.” In one commonly cited definition, the mittaarvona of a finite data set X with n elements is M = (mean(X) + median(X)) / 2, where mean is the arithmetic average and median is the middle value when the data are ordered. Calculation proceeds by computing the mean and the median, then averaging them.
Basic properties: If the data are symmetrically distributed, the mean and median coincide, and mittaarvona equals
Variants and usage: Some authors explore weighted versions where M_w = w*mean + (1-w)*median for a weight w
Example: Data: 1, 2, 3, 100. The mean is 26.5 and the median is 2.5, so mittaarvona
See also: mean, median, robust statistics. Note: the term’s exact definition can vary by source, and mittaarvona