2. Statistical Relationships Generally speaking, a statistical relationship between two variables exists if the values of the observations for one variable are associated with the observations for the other variable.
4. Some Questions How strong is the relationship? What is the direction or shape of the relationship? Is it a causal one? Does it change or disappear if other variables are considered? Can we conclude the relationship holds for the population?
5. Some basics The level of measurement. The form of the relationship. The strength of the relationship. Numerical summaries of relationships. Conditional relationships.
7. Types of Relationships General association. Exists when the values of one variable, X, tend to be associated with specific values of the other variable.
8. Monotonic Relationships Positive monotonic correlation. High values of one variable (X) are associated with high values of another (Y), and conversely, low values (X) are associated with low values (Y). Negative monotonic correlation. High values of X are associated with low values of Y; low values of X are associated with high values of Y.
9. Monotonic Relationships In a positive monotonic relationship, the data curve never goes down once on its way up. In a negative monotonic relationship, the data curve never goes up once on its way down.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16. Strength of Relationship 12-2a. The values of X and Y are tied together tightly. You could imagine a straight line passing through or very near most points. `
17. Strength of Relationship 12-2b The values tend to be associated – as X increases, so does Y – but the connection is rather weak.
18. Measures of Association Measures of association are statistics that summarize the relationships between two variables. These measures are typically used to support theoretical or policy claims.
19. Measures of Association However, a note of caution: These coefficients (1) assume a particular level of measurement – nominal, ordinal, interval and ratio (2) rest on a specific conception of association To interpret its numerical value one has to grasp the kind of association being measured.
20. Important Properties of Coefficients (1) Null value: Zero typically indicates no association, but there are exceptions. (Ex: Difference of the means) (2) Maximum values: Some coefficients have a maximum value. Many are bounded, with the typical lower bound being 0 and the upper bound being 1. (Ex: Correlation)
21. Important Properties of Coefficients (3) Strength of the relationship. Subject to lower and upper boundaries, a coefficient's absolute numerical value increases with the strength of the association. (Ex: Regression coefficient) (4) Level of measurement. Nominal, ordinal and quantitative variables require their own type of coefficient. (Ex: Stats for quantitative data)
22. Important Properties of Coefficients (5) Symmetry. A symmetric measure keeps the same value no matter which variable is treated as dependent or independent. With an asymmetric measure, the coefficient calculated with Y as dependent variable may be different from the same indicator using X as the dependent variable. (Ex: Correlations)
23. Important Properties of Coefficients Standardized vs. Unstandardized The measurement scale affects the numerical value of most coefficients of association. Sometimes statisticians transform variables into standardized coefficients so that they all have variances of 1. (Ex: Standard errors)