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correlation
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correlation

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Scattergraphs showing different kinds of correlation. In this way, a causal relationship between two variables may be proved or disproved, provided there are no hidden factors.

Degree of relationship between two sets of information. If one set of data increases at the same time as the other, the relationship is said to be positive or direct. If one set of data increases as the other decreases, the relationship is negative or inverse. If there is no relationship between the two sets of data the relationship is said to be zero linear correlation. Correlation can be shown by plotting a line of best fit on a scatter diagram. The steeper the line drawn, whether positive or negative, the stronger the correlation.

In statistics, such relations are measured by the calculation of coefficients of correlation. These generally measure correlation on a scale with 1 indicating perfect positive correlation, 0 no correlation at all, and −1 perfect negative correlation. Correlation coefficients for assumed linear relations include the Pearson product moment correlation coefficient (known simply as the correlation coefficient), Kendall's tau correlation coefficient, or Spearman's rho correlation coefficient, which is used in nonparametric statistics (where the data are measured on ordinal rather than interval scales). A high correlation does not always indicate dependence between two variables; it may be that there is a third (unstated) variable upon which both depend.


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Table 2 shows the correlation matrix for the STREAM, which revealed that the underlying latent traits of the subscales of the STREAM were highly correlated, with Pearson coefficients of between .
In addition, the correlation matrix of the three variables indicated that the number of defensive rebounds a player snags was a better predictor for scoring points (r equals .
Trout and Chow [69] tabulated two-sided nonequicoordinate p X 100 percentage points of trivariate (M = 3) t-distribution with non-singular correlation matrix
 
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