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Fri, 4 Jan 2008 08:31:04 -0800 from Donal P
: I'm using Excel 2003 under XP Professional to examine the relationship, if any, between two sets of data - let's call them 'audit score' and 'profit'. I have 74 data points for each set. When I graph the data points in an XY scatterplot and then add a trendline to the data series, I get a slope for the line of .033. However, when I use the correlation function in data analysis, I get a .0185. I thought these two numbers should be the same. Their sign are the same, but not their values. Overview: the correlation is how closely the points lie to a line, and the slope is the steepness of that line. Details: The correlation coefficient is always between -1 and +1 inclusive. It measures how close the points lie to the best fitting line. r = -1 means the points line up precisely on a line sloping down to the right; r = +1 means they align precisely on a line sloping up to the right. r = .9 means they lie in a good up-to-the-right relationship, but not perfectly linear; r = .8 means less perfectly linear, and so on down to r = 0, which is no linear relationship at all. Then with r = -.1, -.2, and so on, the relationship gets closer and closer to a straight line, but pointing down toward the right. -- Stan Brown, Oak Road Systems, Tompkins County, New York, USA http://OakRoadSystems.com/ "If there's one thing I know, it's men. I ought to: it's been my life work." -- Marie Dressler, in /Dinner at Eight/ |
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