difference between mean2 and mean

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Hovnatan Karapetyan
Hovnatan Karapetyan on 6 Oct 2016
Commented: Walter Roberson on 6 Oct 2016
I have a large matrix A of floats between 0 and 1. When I try mean2(A) it is very different from mean(A(:)). What could be the reason for this?
  2 Comments
James Tursa
James Tursa on 6 Oct 2016
According to the doc mean2(A) uses mean(A(:)). How different are your results? On the order of eps of the answers?
Andrei Bobrov
Andrei Bobrov on 6 Oct 2016
Edited: Andrei Bobrov on 6 Oct 2016
please example
>> a = rand(1000);
>> mean2(a)
ans =
0.5003
>> mean(a(:))
ans =
0.5003

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Answers (2)

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 6 Oct 2016
mean() takes special care for unsigned integers and signed integers. mean2() blindly converts everything to double and totals that and divides by the number of elements. If you are using an integer data type or signed integer data type, the mean2() approach could involve unnecessary loss of precision.
  1 Comment
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 6 Oct 2016
I have now submitted a documentation bug report about this, as the mean2() implementation is not as documented.

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Marc Jakobi
Marc Jakobi on 6 Oct 2016
That's strange. According to your code, there shouldn't be a different output (if A is of type double). It may be a different output if I is of type single.
The main difference is that mean2 computes the mean of all elements while mean computes the mean of each column of the matrix. However, mean2 converts the input (A) to double precision and mean doesn't. So if A is single precision the result may vary slightly if the matrix is very large.

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