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Statistical Correlation: Relationship Between Variables

Statistical Correlation Statistical correlation is a statistical technique which tells us if two variables are related. Published on Explorable.com (http://explorable.com)

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
74 views3 pages

Statistical Correlation: Relationship Between Variables

Statistical Correlation Statistical correlation is a statistical technique which tells us if two variables are related. Published on Explorable.com (http://explorable.com)

Uploaded by

Malcolm Garbutt
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Published on Explorable.com (http://explorable.

com)

Statistical Correlation
Statistical correlation is a statistical technique which tells us if two variables are related. For example, consider the variables family income and family expenditure. It is well known that income and expenditure increase or decrease together. Thus they are related in the sense that change in any one variable is accompanied by change in the other variable [1]. Again price and demand of a commodity are related variables; when price increases demand will tend to decreases and vice versa. If the change in one variable is accompanied by a change in the other, then the variables are said to be correlated. We can therefore say that family income and family expenditure, price and demand are correlated.

Relationship Between Variables


Correlation can tell you something about the relationship between variables [2]. It is used to understand: 1. whether the relationship is positive or negative 2. the strength of relationship. Correlation is a powerful tool that provides these vital pieces of information. In the case of family income and family expenditure, it is easy to see that they both rise or fall together in the same direction. This is called positive correlation. In case of price and demand, change occurs in the opposite direction so that increase in one is accompanied by decrease in the other. This is called negative correlation.

Coefficient of Correlation
Statistical correlation [3] is measured by what is called coefficient of correlation (r). Its numerical value ranges from +1.0 to -1.0. It gives us an indication of the strength of relationship. In general, r > 0 indicates positive relationship, r < 0 indicates negative relationship while r = 0 indicates no relationship (or that the variables are independent and not related). Here r = +1.0 describes a perfect positive correlation and r = -1.0 describes a perfect negative correlation.

Closer the coefficients are to +1.0 and -1.0, greater is the strength of the relationship between the variables. As a rule of thumb, the following guidelines on strength of relationship are often useful (though many experts would somewhat disagree on the choice of boundaries). Value of r Strength of relationship

-1.0 to -0.5 or 1.0 to 0.5 Strong -0.5 to -0.3 or 0.3 to 0.5 Moderate -0.3 to -0.1 or 0.1 to 0.3 Weak -0.1 to 0.1 None or very weak Correlation is only appropriate for examining the relationship between meaningful quantifiable data (e.g. air pressure, temperature) rather than categorical data such as gender, favorite color etc.

Disadvantages
While 'r' (correlation coefficient) is a powerful tool, it has to be handled with care. 1. The most used correlation coefficients only measure linear relationship [4]. It is therefore perfectly possible that while there is strong non linear relationship [5] between the variables [1], r is close to 0 or even 0. In such a case, a scatter diagram can roughly indicate the existence or otherwise of a non linear relationship. 2. One has to be careful in interpreting the value of 'r'. For example, one could compute 'r' between the size of shoe and intelligence of individuals, heights and income. Irrespective of the value of 'r', it makes no sense and is hence termed chance or nonsense correlation. 3. 'r' should not be used to say anything about cause and effect relationship [6]. Put differently, by examining the value of 'r', we could conclude that variables X and Y are related. However the same value of 'r' does not tell us if X influences Y or the other way round. Statistical correlation should not be the primary tool used to study causation [7], because of the problem with third variables [8]. Related pages: Correlational Study [9] Correlation and Causation [7] Spearman Rank Correlation Coefficient [10] Pearson Product Moment Correlation [11] Correlation and Regression [12] Partial Correlation Analysis [13]

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Cloudy With A Chance Of Joy [20] Citation: Explorable.com [14] (May 2, 2009). Statistical Correlation. Retrieved Feb 11, 2014 from Explorable.com: http://explorable.com/statistical-correlation [15]
Source URL: http://explorable.com/statistical-correlation Links: [1] http://explorable.com/research-variables, [2] http://explorable.com/relationship-between-variables, [3] http://www.surveysystem.com/correlation.htm, [4] http://explorable.com/linear-relationship, [5] http://explorable.com/non-linear-relationship, [6] http://explorable.com/cause-and-effect, [7] http://explorable.com/correlation-and-causation, [8] http://explorable.com/confounding-variables, [9] http://explorable.com/correlational-study, [10] http://explorable.com/spearman-rank-correlation-coefficient, [11] http://explorable.com/pearson-product-moment-correlation, [12] http://explorable.com/correlation-andregression, [13] http://explorable.com/partial-correlation-analysis, [14] http://explorable.com/, [15] http://explorable.com/statistical-correlation, [16] http://explorable.com/ideas, [17] http://explorable.com/ideas/what-percentage-of-your-brain-do-you-use, [18] http://explorable.com/ideas/perfect-storm, [19] http://explorable.com/ideas/will-this-go-faster-than-light, [20] http://explorable.com/ideas/cloudy-with-a-chance-of-joy

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