Histogram
A histogram lets you see the shape of a set of data - where its center it, and how far it spreads out on either side. This resource tells about statistics, specifications, center, spread, skewness, kurtosis and other distributions you may encounter. From SkyMark.
Histogram Background
All you ever wanted to know including purpose, sample plot, definition, examples and related tool/techniques. From NIST.
Histogram Bin Width Example
An applet designed to teach students how bin width affects a histogram. From University of South Carolina.
Histogram Explanation
Uses, steps in constructing and an example. From The Quality Tools Cookbook.
How To Determine Number And Size Of Histogram Bins
"I have several thousand rows of data which I need to group into appropriate sized bins for a histogram. The problem is in determining the correct number and size for each bin, i.e. if I had a bunch of test scores and didn't have pre-determined bins (A,B,C,D,F) that were already sized (> 90, 80-89, 70-79, 60-69, <60), how would I figure out the number and size of the bins?" From the iSixSigma Discussion Forum.
What Is A Histogram?
A histogram is used to graphically summarize and display the distribution of a process data set. Learn when it's appropriate to use a histogram, pareto chart, and bar chart, and what the differences are. From iSixSigma.
Submit An Article For Publication Here
Have some tips or an idea that you would like to share with the iSixSigma community? Share it here and help others understand this topic in greater detail.