The KURT function in Google Sheets is an essential statistical tool that measures the kurtosis of a dataset. Kurtosis reflects the shape of the distribution, particularly highlighting the “peakedness” or flatness compared to a normal distribution. This function is crucial for analysts looking to understand the tail behavior of data distributions, which has implications in various fields such as finance, quality control, and research.
Syntax
KURT(data)
- data: A range of cells or an array that contains the numeric values for which you want to calculate the kurtosis.
Example #1
=KURT(A1:A10)
This function calculates the kurtosis of the values in cells A1 through A10, helping to determine the peakedness of this specific dataset. For instance, if the values are {2, 3, 2, 4, 5, 4, 3, 6, 2, 3}, the result may be 1.2, indicating a moderate peak compared to a normal distribution.
Example #2
=KURT(B1:B5)
Here, KURT evaluates the cells B1 to B5 to compute their kurtosis. If the values are {1, 2, 1, 3, 1}, the result might be −1.5, reflecting a distribution that is flatter than normal and indicating a lighter tail.
Example #3
=KURT(C1:C20)
This calculates the kurtosis for a larger dataset in cells C1 through C20. For an example dataset of {10, 11, 12, 10, 15,…} yielding a result of 3.6 indicates a sharper peak compared to a normal distribution.
Error handling
- N/A: This error indicates that your data range contains non-numeric values, which are not suitable for kurtosis calculation.
- DIV/0!: This error occurs if the data range includes insufficient data points for the kurtosis calculation, often less than four numeric entries.
- VALUE!: This error emerges when the data argument is of an inappropriate type, such as a text value instead of numbers.