UNIT 2 VOCAB
Scatterplot
A plot of paired measurements on a collection of individuals
Positive Association
An association between 2 variables - where as one variable increases - so does the other
Negative Association
An association between 2 variables - where as one variable increases - the other decreases
Strong Association
An association where the data points fall close to a line
True/False: Correlation implies causation
False
True/False: If the correlation coefficient is 1, then the slope must be 1 as well.
False
True/False: If there is an association identified between the explanatory and response variable, the relationship is causal.
False
True/False: The response variable is always caused by the explanatory variable
False
True/False: When ice cream sales go up, so do crime rates. A reasonable conclusion is that the increase in ice cream sales causes an increase in the crime rate.
False
Strength
How well the association follows the form
Response Variable
The dependent variable (y) in a linear regression
Explanatory Variable
The independent variable (x) in a linear regression
Form
The type of association - linear or other
True/False: Association does not imply causation.
True
True/False: Correlation coefficient and the slope always have the same sign (positive or negative).
True
True/False: Correlation measures the strength of linear association between two numerical variables.
True
True/False: If the correlation between two variables is close to 0.01, then there is a very weak linear relation between them.
True
True/False: When ice cream sales go up, so do crime rates. A reasonable conclusion is that there is an association between ice cream sales and the crime rate.
True
Linear Association
Two variables, where as one variable increases by a unit - the other variable changes by a constant amount
Direction
Whether the association is increasing or decreasing
Context
Who-What-Where-When-Why