Correlation Correlation
Found 6 free book(s)8. Cross-Correlation Cross-correlation
www.ocean.washington.eduNormalized Cross-Correlation In seismology we often use correlation to search for similar signals that are repeated in a time series – this is known as matched filtering. Because the correlation of two high amplitude signals will tend to give big numbers, one cannot determine the similarity of two signals just by
Lecture 16 - Correlation and Regression
www2.stat.duke.eduCorrelation Quantifying the relationship Correlation describes the strength of the linear association between two variables. It takes values between -1 (perfect negative) and +1 (perfect positive). A value of 0 indicates no linear association. We use ˆto indicate the population correlation coe cient, and R or r
Covariance and correlation - Main Concepts
www.stat.ucla.eduCorrelation: However, the covariance depends on the scale of measurement and so it is not easy to say whether a particular covariance is small or large. The problem is solved by standardize the value of covariance (divide it by ˙ X˙ Y), to get the so called coe cient of correlation ˆ XY. ˆ= cov(X;Y) ˙ X˙ Y; Always, 1 ˆ 1 cov(X;Y) = ˆ ...
CHAPTER 9: SERIAL CORRELATION
www.sfu.caSerial correlation causes OLS to no longer be a minimum variance estimator. 3. Serial correlation causes the estimated variances of the regression coefficients to be biased, leading to unreliable hypothesis testing. The t-statistics will actually appear
Chapter 5 Multiple correlation and multiple regression
personality-project.org130 5 Multiple correlation and multiple regression 5.2.1 Direct and indirect effects, suppression and other surprises If the predictor set x i,x j are uncorrelated, then each separate variable makes a unique con- tribution to the dependent variable, y, and R2,the amount of variance accounted for in y,is the sum of the individual r2.In that case, even though each predictor accounted for only
Canonical Correlation a Tutorial
www.cs.cmu.eduCorrelation is strongly related to signal to noise ratio (SNR), which is a more com-monly used measure in signal processing. Consider a signal x and two noise signals 1 and 2 all having zero mean1 and all being uncorrelated with each other. Let S = E [x 2] and N i i