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25.3: Robust Correlations (24.3.2)

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    8849
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    In the previous chapter we also saw that the hate crime data contained one substantial outlier, which appeared to drive the significant correlation. To compute the Spearman correlation, we first need to convert the data into their ranks, which we can do using the order() function:

    hateCrimes <- hateCrimes %>%
      mutate(hatecrimes_rank = order(avg_hatecrimes_per_100k_fbi),
             gini_rank = order(gini_index))

    We can then compute the Spearman correlation by applying the Pearson correlation to the rank variables"

    cor(hateCrimes$hatecrimes_rank,
      hateCrimes$gini_rank)
    ## [1] 0.057

    We see that this is much smaller than the value obtained using the Pearson correlation on the original data. We can assess its statistical signficance using randomization:

    ## [1] 0.0014

    Here we see that the p-value is substantially larger and far from significance.


    This page titled 25.3: Robust Correlations (24.3.2) is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Russell A. Poldrack via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.