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    Inferences of Cause-and-Effect from Correlational Data

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    MorrisonSpr2012.pdf (611.7Kb)
    MorrisonSpr2012.pptx (689.7Kb)
    Date
    2012-04
    Author
    Morrison, Katelyn
    Bebault, Hali
    Advisor(s)
    Bleske-Rechek, April L.
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    Abstract
    History is filled with examples of humans' inherent tendency to infer cause-and-effect from a mere association. In the abstract, the implication is that when researchers state that "Variable X" and "Variable Y" are correlated, people may mistakenly infer that "Variable X" causes "Variable Y." This study hypothesized that the conflation of correlation with causation is common and that the order in which variables are presented has an influence on which variable is assumed to be the cause and which the effect; and that the influence of variable order is most robust when correlations are presented both visually and in text.
    Subject
    Causation
    Correlation (Statistics)
    Posters
    Permanent Link
    http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/63016
    Type
    Presentation
    Description
    Color poster with text, graphs, and tables.
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