Beth
Philosopher
- Joined
- Dec 6, 2004
- Messages
- 5,598
Woah. So if crime increases in Gabon, and then the number of arrests increase in NYC, it implies a relationship ?
No, only if those events are correlated does it imply a relationship.
Woah. So if crime increases in Gabon, and then the number of arrests increase in NYC, it implies a relationship ?
Yeah, sorry, asking you prepare an adequate response to that one was not fair. You don't know what "correlation" means.Those facts are common knowledge. You are claiming correlations exist. That's a very specific mathematical relationship. Get the data, compute the correlation coefficient and show that it's value is statistically significantly different from zero. Then I'll comment on the relationships.
{snip}
Yeah, sorry, asking you prepare an adequate response to that one was not fair. You don't know what "correlation" means.
Yeah, sorry, asking you prepare an adequate response to that one was not fair. You don't know what "correlation" means.
While some may disagree, personally I think a large part of the reason the risk of those diseases is low is due to widespread vaccination.
It's because MMR vaccine coverage in the West is 80-90%+, thus, if one individual does become infected, susceptibles do not interact with each other often enough to spread the disease.
That doesn't apply for diseases such as Meningitis C or Hepatitis B though, which are pretty rare in the first place and usually require close contact with an infected individual to stand a reasonable chance of being passed on.
Then you have the highly contagious but (in the vast majority of cases) mild diseases such as chickenpox. I doubt mass infant vaccination against it makes a blip in a graph of child mortality or morbidity.
But they do correlate (inversely) with time. The prices just have no relationship.Your mind? That would be the only thing I can think of that connects the two. 28 cents a gallon and computer power increasing don't go together in time at all.
Nothing; but see the argument in this thread by "Beth" who claims that correlation implies a relationship.They are occurring at the same time? What does this have to do with vaccinations?
Saying one does not understand correlation can be a fact, not an insult. Someone who says I don't know law is not insulting, it is a fact- I am not a lawyer.No, personal insults and being dumb are never required. In fact, being an ass just make you look bad.
We wear more Nikes in the US. Maybe that's why we have a higher infant mortality rate.What a wonderful example of selective quoting to attempt to look smart by making someone else look dumb, JJM.
Are you really that uninformed about the scientific process? It has nothing to do with data supporting one point or another.How about quoting everything Beth wrote on correlation:
The ironic thing that all of you have not noticed is that most of the correlations Beth highlighted supported your point of view. I.e., vaccination appears to be related to a drop in child mortality.
Running out of arguments or just getting testy?But hey, Ivor, Beth and KellyB are the enemy, so let's ridicule them. How very...Human.
No, it does not imply a relationship. Not in science. A coincidence is not a relationship.Yes, it does imply a relationship. It just may not be a causal relationship.
That would be an association. There is no association between infant mortality rate and numbers of vaccines in the data you are claiming. There is a decrease in mortality of vaccine preventable diseases.Show me the actual data and prove your claimed correlations actually exist and I'll speculate on what their relationship is. Correlation does imply a relationship, just not a causal one. For example, drownings increase with ice cream sales. The correlation is quite strong. The relationship is that both increase with temperature. They have a common causal factor.
There would be a correlation except in this case the numbers only appear to vary together because of the way Beth has chosen to count. If you accurately look at the data, the correlation she is claiming exists is not there.Correlation means that two characteristics vary together. As Beth pointed out, two characteristics that vary because they are confounded (they vary together because they share an association with another characteristic) can still be reasonably said to be related. After all, we don't always know these things in advance.
However, if the variable that is shared is 'time', it becomes meaningless to call it a relationship. If not an outright tautology, the observation that variables vary with time is at the very least trivial. There are many characteristics that are progressive - the price of goods and services, the adoption of new technology, mortality rates, etc. The complaint levied (as far as I can tell) is that finding a significant correlation between two variables because both represent the progress of time is not a useful exercise.
Linda
Your examples are not representative of the problem. Your correlation of numbers of vaccines is not real. If it were real, you would see it when you controlled for other variables. When you control for income and race, your numbers of vaccines are shown to be no longer correlated.I think you are the one who is mistaken, and I'm not trying to insult you either. Think about it. If a strong correlation does not imply a relationship, then what use is it? Why do we bother computing the numbers and testing whether a correlation exists?
In fact, any non-zero correlation implies that the two variables are not independent (i.e. they are related in some way) but in practice, small correlations are to be expected due to random chance alone. We can test correlations to see whether or not the meet the criteria to be considered statistically significant, but a general rule of thumb is a correlation of over .80 (or under -.80) is considered significant even for small sample sizes. There were strong inverse correlations between the measles vaccine and child mortality rates, though not for every country I tested. Why are you arguing that there is no relationship between the two.
It's hard not to lose one's patience when such an obvious error in logic cannot be grasped.No, personal insults and being dumb are never required. In fact, being an ass just make you look bad.
It's hard not to lose one's patience when such an obvious error in logic cannot be grasped.
Have I just been transported to wonderland?There would be a correlation except in this case the numbers only appear to vary together because of the way Beth has chosen to count. If you accurately look at the data, the correlation she is claiming exists is not there.
No, only if those events are correlated does it imply a relationship.
No, only if those events are correlated does it imply a relationship.
In probability theory and statistics, correlation, also called correlation coefficient, indicates the strength and direction of a linear relationship between two random variables.