product-moment correlation coefficient
Học thuậtThân thiện
A researcher calculates the product-moment correlation coefficient from a scatterplot.
Definition
- Noun:
- A statistical measure: The "product-moment correlation coefficient" is a specific numerical index that quantifies the strength and direction of a linear relationship between two continuous variables. It is the most standard and frequently used method for calculating such a correlation.
Usage
- The term is used primarily in statistics, data analysis, psychology, and the social and natural sciences.
- It describes the result of a specific calculation, not the relationship itself. The relationship is described by the , and this coefficient is its .
- It is often simply called the "correlation coefficient" or denoted by the symbol .
Examples
- Noun:
- The researcher calculated the product-moment correlation coefficient to assess the link between study hours and exam scores.
- A product-moment correlation coefficient of +0.85 indicates a very strong positive linear relationship.
- Before computing the product-moment correlation coefficient, you must check if your data meets the assumption of a linear relationship.
Advanced Usage
- "Pearson product-moment correlation coefficient": This is the full, formal name, named after statistician Karl Pearson. It is synonymous with "product-moment correlation coefficient."
- The Pearson product-moment correlation coefficient is appropriate for interval or ratio level data.
Variants and Related Words
- Correlation coefficient (r) (n): The general term, often referring specifically to the product-moment type.
- Pearson's r (n): A common abbreviated name for the coefficient.
- Linear correlation (n): The type of relationship this coefficient measures.
Synonyms
- Pearson correlation coefficient: The direct synonym, using the statistician's name.
- Pearson's r: A standard shorthand synonym.
Related Terms (Conceptual, not lexical)
- Covariance: A related measure from which the correlation coefficient is derived.
- Linear relationship: The specific type of association this coefficient is designed to measure.
- Coefficient of determination (r²): A statistic derived by squaring the correlation coefficient, representing the proportion of variance shared by the two variables.
A researcher calculates the product-moment correlation coefficient from a scatterplot.
Noun
- the most commonly used method of computing a correlation coefficient between variables that are linearly related