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Wumbo
wumbo.net › symbols › mu
Mu Symbol (μ)
The Greek letter μ (mu) is used in statistics to represent the population mean of a distribution.
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Statistics By Jim
statisticsbyjim.com › home › blog › sample mean vs population mean: symbol & formulas
Sample Mean vs Population Mean: Symbol & Formulas - Statistics By Jim
December 13, 2024 - Learn about Measures of Central Tendency: Mean, Median, and Mode. The Greek letter µ (mu) is the symbol for a population mean. Statisticians frequently use Greek letters for measures of entire populations.
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Statistics How To
statisticshowto.com › home › population mean definition, example, formula
Population Mean Definition, Example, Formula - Statistics How To
February 5, 2025 - Calculating the mean for a population (the entire group) requires different notation than calculating the mean for a sample (a portion of the group). The symbols for the two are distinct: Population mean symbol = μ Sample mean symbol = x̄.
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Statistics LibreTexts
stats.libretexts.org › bookshelves › introductory statistics › mostly harmless statistics (webb) › back matter
Symbols - Statistics LibreTexts
March 12, 2023 - https://stats.libretexts.org/@app/auth/3/login?returnto=https://stats.libretexts.org/Bookshelves/Introductory_Statistics/Mostly_Harmless_Statistics_(Webb)/zz%3A_Back_Matter/24%3A_Symbols
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6 Sigma
6sigma.us › articles › sample mean: a comprehensive guide to understanding, calculating, and applying statistical averages
Sample Mean: A Comprehensive Guide to Understanding, Calculating, and Applying Statistical Averages - SixSigma.us
April 16, 2025 - While the sample mean represents the average of a subset of data, the population mean (symbolized by μ) represents the average of an entire population.
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Math Vault
mathvault.ca › home › higher math resource hub › foundation of higher mathematics › mathematical symbols › probability and statistics symbols
List of Probability and Statistics Symbols | Math Vault
April 11, 2025 - A comprehensive collection of the most common symbols in probability and statistics, categorized by function into charts and tables along with each symbol's term, meaning and example.
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Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Mu_(letter)
Mu (letter) - Wikipedia
October 10, 2025 - "μ" is conventionally used to denote certain things; however, any Greek letter or other symbol may be used freely as a variable name. a measure in measure theory · minimalization in computability theory and Recursion theory · the integrating factor in ordinary differential equations · the degree of membership in a fuzzy set · the Möbius function in number theory · the population mean or expected value in probability and statistics ·
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Statistics Solutions
statisticssolutions.com › home › dissertation resources › common statistical formulas
Common Statistical Formulas - Statistics Solutions
May 13, 2025 - The symbol ‘μ’ stands for the population mean. Meanwhile, ‘Σ Xi’ indicates the sum of all scores in the population (such as X1, X2, X3, and so on).
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Fiveable
fiveable.me › all key terms › ap statistics › population mean
Population Mean Definition - AP Statistics Key Term | Fiveable
The population mean is denoted by the symbol μ (mu), while the sample mean is denoted by x̄ (x-bar).
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/statistics › [q] why do we use x̄ as the symbol for sample mean?
r/statistics on Reddit: [Q] Why do we use x̄ as the symbol for sample mean?
April 7, 2022 -

Perhaps more of a meta-statistics question than a statistics question, but I've been trying to understand the origins of the conventional symbols used in statistics and can't find any good sources. The two most common ways to distinguish a parameter from an estimator seem to be either using roughly equivalent Greek and Latin characters or hat. I've seen both 'π' and 'p' used to represent population proportions (though 'p' is definitely more common in introductory courses) and I've seen 'π' used often as a function in Bayesian statistics. Hat seems to be the preferred method of denoting an estimator for any new methods/unestablished/'non-canonical' statistics. Both 's' and 'σ' make a lot of sense, and 'μ' makes sense for population means, so where on earth did 'x̄' come from? Was 'm' already being used elsewhere? Did it come about before these conventions were established? I'm aware the 'X' is the goto for random variables and bar is generally used to denote means, but why? Why are there competing conventions, anyways?

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bar is generally used to denote means, but why because someone did it that way, presumably because it seemed like a good idea at the time, and then other people followed suit, as with almost any notational convention. m was often used for means of both distributions and of samples across a wide range of time; it's "re-invented" regularly. I always assumed the bar came from physics. The use of a bar over small x is discussed here: https://mathshistory.st-andrews.ac.uk/Miller/mathsym/stat/ (or see the older version of the page here http://www.math.hawaii.edu/~tom/history/stat.html ) ... scroll about 3/4 of the way down, to the section headed SYMBOLS IN STATISTICS and look at paragraph 2. It looks like it did indeed come from physics. Why are there competing conventions, anyways? Because people keep ignoring existing conventions in favor of ones they like for one reason or another (sometimes out of ignorance, sometimes with a pedagogical motive, sometimes to avoid a clash with some other convention, etc). Standards always multiply. Just recently (i.e. in the last few decades) it happened when ML people started adopting a lot of statistical methods and redefined all the terms and symbols (sometimes to match their own pre-existing terms, sometimes out of ignorance that there was already a good term/notation, sometimes for other reasons). Sadly, some of those conventions cause serious issues (like calling a regression coefficient a weight, leading to a serious clash when you need to talk about weighted regression).
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I don't have many answers in terms of why notation differs, but X is often written as a vector of random variables (in mathematical statistics at least). I think it makes sense then that x_bar is a commonly used notation to denote the mean of that vector because μ is already used to describe the population mean e.g. X_1...X_n Where X_i ~ N(μ, σ). edit: rereading your post again, I guess my question is: "what would be a more readable notation than x̄ is the mean of X?" I suppose you could use μ_X or something but then it's not explicit that this mean should differ from the population μ.
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Psyteachr
psyteachr.github.io › ug3-stats › symbols.html
A Symbols | Learning Statistical Models Through Simulation in R
A Greek letter with a “hat” represents and estimate of the population value from the sample; i.e., \(\mu_x\) represents the true population mean of \(X\), while \(\hat{\mu}_x\) represents its estimate from the sample.
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Wumbo
wumbo.net › symbols › x-bar
X Bar Symbol (x̄)
The combining macron is a unicode character used to draw a macron (horizontal bar) over the symbol it is combined with. ... The Greek letter σ (sigma) is used in statistics to represent the standard deviation of a population. ... The Greek letter μ (mu) is used in statistics to represent ...
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First of all to answer a question you didn't ask, $\mu$ is the Greek equivalent of the latin $m$, which stands for mean.

Now for the question you did ask. If you have a random variable $X$, and let's assume $X$ is positive for simplicity, then you always have a mean $\mathbb EX$ (which could be infinite). The mean is computed mathematically, by integrating against the probability density function. Thus, both the variable $X$ and the mean $\mu=\mathbb EX$ are theoretical quantities. They describe the statitician's model of the quantity of interest.

On the other hand, the way experiments commonly work is that we collect a sequence of samples to try to nail down a more accurate model. Now the experiment as a whole can be thought of as a single random object, described mathematically by a probability distribution (or better yet, measure) on an infinite sequence space. The actual measurements taken can be written as an infinite sequence $(X_i)_{i\in\mathbb N}$. Now our model will usually posit that the measurements we take all have the same distribution ($X_i$ and $X_j$ have the same law, for all $i$ and $j$) and that the measurements are independent. In this case, the central limit theorem guarantees that if you compute the sample mean $$ \lim_{n\to\infty}\frac{X_1+\cdots+X_n}{n}, $$ this a priori random quantity will in fact converge (with probability $1$) to the theoretical mean $\mathbb EX_1$.

Thus, in the limit of a very large number of samples, there ceases to be a distinction between the theoretical mean of a single variable, and the sample mean of the whole population.

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Consider we have the data {x1, x2, x3, x4} with probabilities {p1, p2, p3, p4}

Expected value: $$E(x) = x1*p(x1) + x2*p(x2) + x3*p(x3) + x4*p(x4)$$

if probabilities are the same then: $E(x) = \frac{\sum xi}{4}$ that is the same as Mean (average of xis

if probabilities are not the same, then: the average of xis would be their weighted sum and that is again like E(x)

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BrownMath
brownmath.com › swt › symbol.htm
Symbol Sheet / SWT
μ mu, pronounced “mew” = mean of a population.
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Answers
math.answers.com › statistics › What_is_the_symbol_for_population_mean_in_statistics
What is the symbol for population mean in statistics? - Answers
April 28, 2022 - The mean is typically represented by the symbol ( \mu ) (mu) when referring to the population mean, and by ( \bar{x} ) (x-bar) when referring to the sample mean.
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Quora
quora.com › How-do-you-insert-x-bar-population-mean-into-a-Word-document
How to insert x bar (population mean) into a Word document - Quora
Answer (1 of 10): For Word 2011 for Mac, not sure of other versions, typing "x\bar" (without quotation marks) puts the bar over the x. As far as I can tell, you can do this for any letter, not just x.
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Stat Trek
stattrek.com › statistics › notation
Statistics Notation
μ refers to a population mean; and x, to a sample mean. σ refers to the standard deviation of a population; and s, to the standard deviation of a sample. By convention, specific symbols represent certain population parameters.
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μ Population MeanThe term population mean, which is the average score of the population on a given variable, is represented by:μ = ( Σ Xi ) / NThe symbol ‘μ’ represents the population mean. The symbol ‘Σ Xi’ represents the sum of all scores present in the population (say, in this case) X1 X2 X3 and so on. The symbol ‘N’ represents the total number of individuals or cases in the population.Population Standard DeviationThe population standard deviation is a measure of the spread (variability) of the scores on a given variable and is represented by:σ = sqrt[ Σ ( Xi – μ )2 / N ]The symbol ‘σ’ represents the population standard deviation. The term ‘sqrt’ used in this statistical formula denotes square root. The term ‘Σ ( Xi – μ )2’ used in the statistical formula represents the sum of the squared deviations of the scores from their population mean.Population VarianceThe population variance is the square of the population standard deviation and is represented by:σ2 = Σ ( Xi – μ )2 / NThe symbol ‘σ2’ represents the population variance.Sample MeanThe sample mean is the average score of a sample on a given variable and is represented by:x_bar = ( Σ xi ) / nThe term “x_bar” represents the sample mean. The symbol ‘Σ xi’ used in this formula represents the represents the sum of all scores present in the sample (say, in this case) x1 x2 x3 and so on. The symbol ‘n,’ represents the total number of individuals or observations in the sample.Sample Standard DeviationThe statistic called sample standard deviation, is a measure of the spread (variability) of the scores in the sample on a given variable and is represented by:s = sqrt [ Σ ( xi – x_bar )2 / ( n – 1 ) ]The term ‘Σ ( xi – x_bar )2’ represents the sum of the squared deviations of the scores from the sample mean.Sample VarianceThe sample variance is the square of the sample standard deviation and is represented by:s2 = Σ ( xi – x_bar )2 / ( n – 1 )The symbol ‘s2’ represents the sample variance.Pooled Sample Standard DeviationThe pooled sample standard deviation is a weighted estimate of spread (variability) across multiple samples. It is represented by:sp = sqrt [ (n1 – 1) * s12 + (n2 – 1) * s22 ] / (n1 + n2 – 2) ]The term ‘sp’ represents the pooled sample standard deviation. The term ‘n1’ represents the size of the first sample, and the term ‘n2’ represents the size of the second sample that is being pooled with the first sample. The term ‘s12’ represents the variance of the first sample, and ‘s22’ represents the variance of the second sample.