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Violin plots are less popular than box plots. Violin plots may be harder to understand for readers not familiar with them. In this case, a more accessible alternative is to plot a series of stacked histograms or kernel density plots. The original meaning of "violin plot" was a combination of a box plot and a two-sided kernel density plot. [1]
Figure 2. Box-plot with whiskers from minimum to maximum Figure 3. Same box-plot with whiskers drawn within the 1.5 IQR value. A boxplot is a standardized way of displaying the dataset based on the five-number summary: the minimum, the maximum, the sample median, and the first and third quartiles.
Box plot : In descriptive statistics, a boxplot, also known as a box-and-whisker diagram or plot, is a convenient way of graphically depicting groups of numerical data through their five-number summaries (the smallest observation, lower quartile (Q1), median (Q2), upper quartile (Q3), and largest observation). A boxplot may also indicate which ...
Box plot Correlogram Histogram Line chart Scatterplot Violin plot; ADaMSoft: Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Alteryx: Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Analyse-it: Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes BMDP: Yes Yes ELKI: No No No Yes Yes Yes Epi Info: Yes No No Yes Yes Yes EViews: Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes GAUSS: Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes GenStat: Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes GraphPad Prism ...
A bagplot, or starburst plot, [1] [2] is a method in robust statistics for visualizing two-or three-dimensional statistical data, analogous to the one-dimensional box plot. Introduced in 1999 by Rousseuw et al., the bagplot allows one to visualize the location, spread, skewness, and outliers of a data set. [3]
Analogous to the classical boxplot and considered an expansion of the concepts defining functional boxplot, [2] [3] the descriptive statistics of a contour boxplot are: the envelope of the 50% central region, the median curve and the maximum non-outlying envelope. To construct a contour boxplot, data ordering is the first step.
In statistical graphics, the functional boxplot is an informative exploratory tool that has been proposed for visualizing functional data. [1] [2] Analogous to the classical boxplot, the descriptive statistics of a functional boxplot are: the envelope of the 50% central region, the median curve and the maximum non-outlying envelope.
Also, the violin plot suffers from the bandwidth estimation problem that someone mentioned in the box-plot article. A better alternative is the dot-box plot, found in Wilkinson, L (1999). Dot plots. The American Statistician, 53, 276-281. It overlays a box plot with a dot plot, so you can see all the data and also see the median, outliers, etc.