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Correlation in Random Variables

Correlation in Random VariablesLecture 11 Spring 2002 Correlation in Random VariablesSuppose that an experimentproduces two Random vari-ables, about the relationship be-tween them?One of the best ways to visu-alize the possible relationshipis to plot the (X, Y)pairthatis produced by several trials ofthe experiment. An exampleof correlated samples is shownat the rightLecture 111 Joint Density FunctionThe joint behavior ofXandYis fully captured in the joint probabilitydistribution. For a continuous distributionE[XmYn]= xmynfXY(x, y)dxdyFor discrete distributionsE[XmYn]= x Sx y SyxmynP(x, y) lecture 112 Covariance FunctionThe covariance function is a number that measures the commonvariation is defined ascov(X, Y)=E[(X E[X])(Y E[Y])]=E[XY] E[X]E[Y]The covariance is determined by the difference inE[XY]andE[X]E[Y].IfXandYwere statistically independent thenE[XY] would equalE[X]E[Y] and the covariance would be covariance of a Random variable with itself is equal to its [X, X]=E[(X E[X])2]=var[X] lecture 113 Correlation CoefficientThe covariance can be normalized to produce what is known as thecorrelation coefficient.

If the random variables are correlated then this should yield a better result, on the average, than just guessing. We are encouraged to select a linear rule when we note that the sample points tend to fall ... for a continuous-time RP and X[n]orXn for a discrete-time RP. Lecture 11 20.

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