ERROR BARS. As far as I can discover, the term 'error bar' can refer to almost
any line that indicates a degree of uncertainty. In different
disciplines and applications they can indicate the standard deviation (SD) of data, the standard error (often SD divided by square root of sample size), or confidence interval (90%, 95%, or 99%). See the very brief Wikipedia 'error bars' article.
ASYMMETRICAL SAMPLES. However, I think your main question has to do with asymmetrical populations, samples from them, and error bars representing
an estimate of a population parameter. A common asymmetrical
family of distributions in statistics is the gamma family, which
includes highly right-skewed exponential distributions.
As an example of asymmetrical confidence intervals, I will show
that confidence intervals for estimates of the mean of an
exponential distribution are asymmetrical.
The population mean of an exponential distribution is estimated
by the sample mean of a sample. Suppose the data are $X_1, \dots, X_{10}$ from an exponential distribution with mean $\mu.$ Then
the sample mean $\bar X/\mu$ has a gamma distribution with
shape parameter $n = 10$ and scale parameter $1/n =0.1$ (rate
parameter $n=10$). Let numbers $L$ and $U$ cut probability 2.5% from the lower and upper ends of this distribution. Then
$$P(L < \bar X/\mu < U) = P(\bar X/U < \mu < \bar X/L) = 0.95,$$
so that $(\bar X/U, \bar X/L)$ is a 95% confidence interval for $\mu.$ Specifically for $n = 10$: $L = 0.480$ and $U = 1.708$ (from statistical software).
CI FOR EXPONENTIAL MEAN. As a numerical example, consider the following sorted data (perhaps
lifetimes in weeks of 10 electronic components subjected to
unfavorable operating conditions):
0.546, 0.742, 1.005, 3.160, 3.594, 4.057, 4.156, 5.483, 12.590, 21.383.
Here, $\bar X = 5.6716$ and the 95% CI for $\mu$ is
$(3.32, 11.83).$
Notice that the data are strongly right skewed, with several
small values close together at the left end and a 'tail' with
large values scattered out towards the right end. Also,
notice that 5.67 is closer to the left end of the CI than to
the right end. (Typically, a CI will not include ALL of the data, its
purpose is to give an interval of values in which we might
logically expect the population mean to lie.)
Notes (1) Error bars often occur in clusters. If we conducted half a dozen experiments of this type on
components of different specifications. We might have made
a data summary of six confidence intervals in a column.
Even though each CI can be considered to have an 'error probability'
of only 5%, the COLLECTION of six CIs taken together
may be considerably higher. So we would have to be cautious
drawing conclusions about PATTERNS of behavior among the
six kinds of components. (There are ways to make CIs so
that the error rate of the FAMILY of CIs is only 5%, but that is
another topic.)
(2) Suppose we had not noticed the skewness or known that
the data above are from an exponential distribution. Then we might
INCORRECTLY have assumed a symmetrical normal distribution
and used a symmetrical CI based on the t-distribution. That
incorrect symmetrical interval would be of the form $\bar X \pm 2.262 S/\sqrt{10},$ which would compute to $(1.01, 10.34).$ [For the data shown above $S = 6.52,$ a statistic not needed for the correct CI.]
Best Answer
The answer to "what is the best way to describe data" is really "it depends on what you want to do with the description". In this case, with only about 25 numbers, you could easily show them all in a histogram. That will give your reader a way to see the shape of the distribution:
It's so irregular that perhaps no summary statistics do it justice.