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low, medium and high

To categorize data into low, medium, and high categories, you can use several methods, each with its own advantages. The best method depends on the nature of your data and your specific goals. Here are a few common approaches:

  1. Equal Intervals
    The equal interval method divides the range of data into three equal-sized sub-ranges. This is the simplest method and is easy to understand.
  1. Quantiles (Percentiles)
    This method divides the data into groups with an equal number of observations in each. For three categories, you’d use tertiles (33.3rd and 66.7th percentiles).
  1. Manual or Custom Thresholds
    This method involves setting fixed, predetermined thresholds based on expert knowledge or specific business rules, rather than relying on the data’s distribution.

You can use the mean and standard deviation to categorize data into low, medium, and high categories, especially if your data is normally distributed (i.e., follows a bell curve). This method uses the Empirical Rule (also known as the 68-95-99.7 rule) as a guideline.
How to Use the Method 📈

Example
Let’s say you’re analyzing exam scores, and the results are normally distributed with a mean of 75 and a standard deviation of 10.

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