Wrath of the Swarm said:
The relationship is not linear - therefore it is not an inverse relationship.
Nor are they independent. The value of one is indeed influenced by the value of the other - it's just not determined.
It is NEITHER independent NOR inverse.
Here, hang on, I think we are agreeing on this one, no need to shout.
The relationship is not inevitably linear, so yes, it's not correct to describe it as "inverse", baldly, just like that.
But it's not independent either. One does influence the other, in an inverse direction.
This is what I was trying to convey when I said independent (or inverse). Some tests more independent, others with more of an inverse relationship. So we seem to mean the same thing.
Consider an ELISA. You have to decide where your absorbance (OD) cutoff will go. Higher than the cutoff is positive (usually, unless you have a descending reaction which is unusual), lower is negative. You fiddle with this to try to optimise the test. Raise the cutoff and you get fewer false positives - but at the price of more false negatives. Lower the cutoff and the opposite applies.
I think this one is fairly linear actually.
Or a Western Blot, where you are recognising characteristic bands in the gel. Require only two matching bands to call positive, and you'll get too many false positives. Require all four, and you'll get too many false negatives. Settle on three for optimum performance.
This isn't linear, but there's still a qualitative inverse relationship.
And some tests have relatively little relationship.
But in no case is the relationship direct.
For this "accuracy" invention to be valid, you'd need to have tests that vary in exact direct relationship, and the thing is, they don't.
Rolfe.