Correlation Flashcards

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1
Q

What is the purpose of a correlation study?

A

Investigate the strength and direction of a relatioship between two variables

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2
Q

What are the three types of correlation?

A
  • Positive
  • Negative
  • No correlation
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3
Q

What do correlation studies investigate?

A

A relationship

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4
Q

Strengths of Relationships in correlation

A

-1 = Perfect negative correlation
-0.75 = Strong negative correlation
-0.5 = Moderate negative correlation
-0.25 = Weak negative correlation
0 = No correlation
0.25 = Weak positive correlation
0.5 = Moderate positive correlation
0.75 = Strong positive correlation
1 = Perfect positive correlation

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5
Q

Obtaining data for a correlational analysis

A

Primary and secondary data
Sampling method
Ethics

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6
Q

What is primary data?

A

Data gathered directly by the participants

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7
Q

What is secondary data?

A

Data that has already been gathered by someone other then the researcher.

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8
Q

Descriptive statistics for correlations

A

The appropriate form of descriptive statistics to use to display the results of a correlational study is a scatter graph.
On the basis of how the crosses are distributed, it should be possible to make broad conclusions about whether there is any relationship between the co-variables and if so the direction and approximate strength of the relationship.

-1 = Perfect negative correlation
0 = No correlation
1 = Perfect positive correlation

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9
Q

What does it mean when there is no correlation?

A

There does not appear to be a relationship between two sets of data

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10
Q

What does it mean when there is a positive correlation?

A

A correlation where as one variable increases, the other also increases.
Both variables move in the same direction.
(Has a plus sign)

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11
Q

What does it mean when there is a negative correlation?

A

As one data set increases the other decreases. (Has a minus sign)

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12
Q

Operationalising variables in a correlation study

A

Any co-variable needs to be expressed as a number.
Each participant must have 2 separate (ordinal level) numbers that relate to them, one of reach co-variable.

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13
Q

Advantages of a correlation study?

A
  • Although correlations may not involve the collection of new data, they can still tell us something new.
  • If it turns out the two co-variables are related, it wont just tell us that, but also the strength and direction of the relationship.
  • There is no manipulation in a correlational study, it is a useful technique when either practical or ethical reasons mean that the variables cannot be manipulated.
  • It can act as a good starting point for research because one relationships have been established between co-variables, more research can then be established to investigate hem further.
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14
Q

Disadvantages of a correlation study?

A
  • It can not tell us anything about cause and effect, just that there is a relationship between them. It doesn’t tell us why or take into account hidden third factors.
  • Inferential statistical tests will not always pick up on a relationship between co-variables. e.g. a curvilinea relationship wont be picked up even though there is a genuine pattern to the relationship
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