No, the age isn't the data, the n numbers are the data. Ages are just a property used to group the data.hey tug, i'm not sure what you are saying here. i always thought ages were data, and that the calculation of central tendencies was very straightforward, but i'm always open to being re-educated
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central_tendency
For example, you might use individual years to group people, but there is nothing intrinsically special about a year. You could equally well group them as 0-5, 6-13, 14-25, 26-45, 46-77, 78-100. What is important is the n number associated with each group, the property of the group is not what is being averaged.






