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The phrase "average data for" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to data that represents a mean or typical value for a specific set of information or a particular category.
Example: "The average data for the last quarter shows a significant increase in sales compared to the previous quarter."
Alternatives: "mean data for" or "typical data for".
Exact(31)
Data points represent the average data for 11 observers.
Some of them will receive far more than the average; data for 2013 showed that the most senior executives in London received an average of £3m.
"Average data for the euro area disguises some divergence," Jörg Asmussen, a member of the executive board of the European Central Bank, acknowledged in an interview in Berlin last week.
Only average data for the whole sample and each group are shown in the tables.
However, they determined r using the average data for all the night and to obtain its temporal variation, a sliding window of 1 h was used.
Agrometeorological average data for rainfall, relative humidity, mean temperature, soil temperature, mean sunshine hour and evaporation at 2-week intervals during the experiment were presented in Table 1.
Similar(29)
A new method for averaging data for which incomplete information is available is presented.
Solar radiation is represented in detail through actual, hourly averaged data for an entire year.
Notably, the increasing or decreasing trend detected by these averaged data for one month (Fig. 1b) is common to the result without averaging (Fig. 1a).
Of course it can also be argued that this analysis, like most studies, offers us only averaged data for a population of people.
Figure 1 One-minute averaged data for the geophysical field measurements.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com