Calculates the Japanese deviation value (T-score) as 50 + 10 × (score − mean) ÷ standard deviation. A score at the mean gives 50, and one standard deviation above gives 60.
Explanation
The deviation value, or T-score, is the standard way of expressing a position within a group in Japan. It rescales scores so that the mean becomes exactly 50 and one standard deviation becomes 10.
T=50+10×σx−xˉ Here x is the score, xˉ the mean and σ the standard deviation.
Example
With a score of 80, a mean of 60 and a standard deviation of 10:
T=50+10×1080−60=50+10×2=70 The score sits two standard deviations above the mean, giving a T-score of 70.
Rough guide
If the scores are close to a normal distribution, the T-score maps onto a percentile roughly like this:
- 60 — top 16% or so
- 70 — top 2.3% or so
- 80 — top 0.13% or so
Watch out
- The same raw score gives different T-scores in different groups. Scoring 60 on a hard exam is worth far more than 60 on an easy one
- T-scores are not confined to the 0–100 range; an extreme result can exceed 100 or fall below 0
- If the score distribution is far from normal, the percentile guide above does not hold
- A standard deviation of zero, where everyone scores the same, makes the calculation impossible