The Palmaris Longus.
(Human Anatomy and Physiology, 7th Edition, Marieb/Hoen)
Median sulcus of tongue
The median and mode cannot be outliers. For small samples a mode could be an outlier.
The median is the middle of average of the middle two values from the ordered set of observations. If the extreme values are genuine then they will have no effect on the median. If they are incorrectly measured or recorded data then they may affect the position of the middle of the ordered set of data. However, since there can only be a small number of outliers, their effect on the median will be small.
smooth muscle fibers are located in small skeletal muscle
An outlier can significantly impact the median by pulling it towards the extreme value of the outlier, especially when the dataset is small. This can distort the central tendency measure that the median represents and provide a misleading representation of the typical value in the dataset.
Caecilian rely on small sensitive tentacles on its head to locate the worms, insects, snails and other small animals it eats. They also locate their food by taste and smell.
smooth musclesmooth muscle
To locate small objects on a slide using a microscope, first use the lowest power objective lens, typically the scanning objective (4x). This provides a wider field of view, making it easier to locate the specimen. Once found, you can then switch to a higher power objective for a more detailed examination. Adjust the stage and focus carefully to keep the object in view.
A small muscle in the ear named Stapedius
yes* * * * *No. If you have a small, even number of observations, the median is the average of the two middle values. This will usually NOT be part of the data set.
No. and cardiac muscle is technically different from skeletal muscle, too.
If the wide range is evenly spread between the very small and the very large (the distribution is symmetric) then there is not much to choose between the median and the mean. If not, the median will have some advantages as a measure of central tendency.