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by ckdot2
1025 days ago
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Of course we can expect errors, I don't doubt that. That's what I mean with "wrong". But still, how should the author consider that if he doesn't know about the precision nor quantity of errors?
I just don't think that's the topic of the article. The article is about correlations in the dataset, no matter, if the dataset may contain errors. |
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Confidence bounds for every correlation coefficient would add value and _might_ change some of the interpretations.
E.g.: "its average correlation with the other measurements is only 0.03, which is not just small, it is substantially smaller than the next smallest, which is ear breadth, with an average correlation of 0.13."
If the former is 0.03 +- 0.02 and the latter is 0.13 +- 0.07, we could claim that both are equal to 0 (or just equal).