Complex Correlations

Description

Correlations, partial correlations, confound, unexplained random variance, split file, z value
PPKD
Note by PPKD, updated more than 1 year ago
PPKD
Created by PPKD over 10 years ago
26
1

Resource summary

Page 1

Correlations   A correlation looks for a significant relationship between two variables. E.g. does memory increase change with increasing age? Values range from -1 to +1.   Hypothesis: Positive or negative relationship?   Results: There is a significant positive relationship between emotional IQ and the ability to recognise facial emotions (r = .660, p = .002).   If significant then create a scatterplot, and include a line of best-fit. Residual = difference between raw data point and best-fit line.   CORRELATION DOES NOT IMPLY CAUSATION   There could be a 3rd variable affecting the results – we can control for this. E.g. there are more ice cream sales and more shark attacks: when it is hot more people buy ice creams and more people swim in the sea.   With facial emotion recognition and emotional IQ, a potential confound could be social anxiety.   We can control for temperature when analysing the ice cream sales and shark attacks correlations. The confound may explain some of the random (unexplained residual) variance.   Partial correlation: Is there a correlation after controlling for social anxiety score.   Results: After controlling for social anxiety, there is a positive correlation between the recognition of facial emotion and emotional intelligence (r = .467, p = .044).   Does the strength of the correlation change from the original to the partial? If it weakens, then it tells us that some of the variance can be explained by social anxiety.   Sex could also be a confound: Is the correlation between emotional IQ and emotion recognition significantly different for males and females? You could compare these correlations through splitting file for sex: Males = no correlation, females = positive correlation. There is a sex difference in the relationship between accuracy for emotional face processing and emotional intelligence. You can graph these results through two correlations, and test whether the correlations are significantly different (need to go to a different website to do this).   You get a z value, which tells you whether the correlation is significantly larger in males than females.  

Correlations

Show full summary Hide full summary

Similar

T Tests
PPKD
Untitled
PPKD
Untitled
PPKD
Untitled
PPKD
Breaking Bad
PatrickNoonan
Question Words - GCSE German
lucykatewarman1227
One child policy, China- Population Control Case Study
a a
How to Develop the Time Management Skills Essential to Succeeding in IB Courses
nina.stuer14
GCSE AQA Physics - Unit 3
James Jolliffe
How did the Cold War develop?
E A
GCSE REVISION TIMETABLE
neharaniga