Chapter 16
Chapter 16
1
Correlations: Measuring and
Describing Relationships
• A correlation is a statistical method used to
measure and describe the relationship
between two variables.
• A relationship exists when changes in one
variable tend to be accompanied by
consistent and predictable changes in the
other variable.
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Correlations: Measuring and
Describing Relationships (cont.)
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Correlations: Measuring and
Describing Relationships (cont.)
• The direction of the relationship is
measured by the sign of the correlation (+
or -). A positive correlation means that the
two variables tend to change in the same
direction; as one increases, the other also
tends to increase. A negative correlation
means that the two variables tend to
change in opposite directions; as one
increases, the other tends to decrease.
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Correlations: Measuring and
Describing Relationships (cont.)
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Correlations: Measuring and
Describing Relationships (cont.)
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Correlations: Measuring and
Describing Relationships (cont.)
• To compute a correlation you need two
scores, X and Y, for each individual in the
sample.
• The Pearson correlation requires that the
scores be numerical values from an
interval or ratio scale of measurement.
• Other correlational methods exist for other
scales of measurement.
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The Pearson Correlation
• The Pearson correlation measures the
direction and degree of linear (straight line)
relationship between two variables.
• To compute the Pearson correlation, you first
measure the variability of X and Y scores
separately by computing SS for the scores of
each variable (SSX and SSY).
• Then, the covariability (tendency for X and Y to
vary together) is measured by the sum of
products (SP).
• The Pearson correlation is found by computing
the ratio, SP/(SSX)(SSY) .
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The Pearson Correlation (cont.)
• Thus the Pearson correlation is comparing the
amount of covariability (variation from the
relationship between X and Y) to the amount X
and Y vary separately.
• The magnitude of the Pearson correlation
ranges from 0 (indicating no linear relationship
between X and Y) to 1.00 (indicating a perfect
straight-line relationship between X and Y).
• The correlation can be either positive or
negative depending on the direction of the
relationship.
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The Spearman Correlation
• The Spearman correlation is used in two
general situations:
(1) It measures the relationship between two
ordinal variables; that is, X and Y both consist of
ranks.
(2) It measures the consistency of direction of
the relationship between two variables. In this
case, the two variables must be converted to
ranks before the Spearman correlation is
computed.
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The Spearman Correlation (cont.)
The calculation of the Spearman correlation requires:
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The Point-Biserial Correlation and
the Phi Coefficient
• The Pearson correlation formula can also
be used to measure the relationship
between two variables when one or both
of the variables is dichotomous.
• A dichotomous variable is one for which
there are exactly two categories: for
example, men/women or succeed/fail.
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The Point-Biserial Correlation and
the Phi Coefficient (cont.)
With either one or two dichotomous variables the
calculation of the correlation precedes as
follows:
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The Point-Biserial Correlation and
the Phi Coefficient (cont.)
• In this case, the independent-measures t
test can be used to evaluate the mean
difference between groups.
• If the effect size for the mean difference is
measured by computing r2 (the percentage
of variance explained), the value of r2 will
be equal to the value obtained by squaring
the point-biserial correlation.
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