Whether the two variables have the same units does not matter. Moreover, even if there were some way of converting cm to kg the correlation would still be the same because the correlation is invariant under unit conversion as it is invariant under multiplication of its arguments by a constant. As for your second question, the correlation estimator is a continuous function of each of the individual data points, so perturbing the values of any of them by a sufficiently small amount will only perturb the correlation by a small amount.
-----Original Message----- From: dechao wang [SMTP:dechwang at yahoo.co.uk] Sent: Thursday, March 07, 2002 5:34 AM To: r-help at stat.math.ethz.ch Subject: [R] linear correlation? Hi, I have checked statistic textbooks about correlations, but I am still not sure the correlation analysis with different units, for example, x1<-c(1, 2, 3, 100, 200, 300) x2<-c(1.1,2.8,3.3, 108, 209, 303) the unit of the first 3 numbers is cm the unit of the last 3 numbers is kg cor(x1,x2)=0.999655 Can I explain the correlation coefficient as normal in which all numbers have the same unit? Secondly, if keep the three large numbers unchanged, just change the three small numbers, the coefficient changes little, this means that the variation of three small numbers is hidden by the three larger numbers. Is there any solution in R to solve this issue? Thanks, Dechao
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