- Wed Jun 17, 2020 4:05 pm
#76285
Hi!
I understand why A is the right answer. However, I feel like C was also a potential correct answer.
C says "drinking caffeinated beverages is more strongly correlated with the development of heart disease than is smoking." In fact, strong correlation does not imply positive correlation; rather, it refers to the magnitude of the correlation. If two variables have correlation = -0.98, we would call that very strong correlation.
If caffeinated beverages were more strongly correlated with heart disease than was smoking, and the former pair's correlation was negative, the former correlation would overpower the latter and the argument would lose all force.
Thanks so much for all that this forum does! Interested to hear your thoughts on this.
I understand why A is the right answer. However, I feel like C was also a potential correct answer.
C says "drinking caffeinated beverages is more strongly correlated with the development of heart disease than is smoking." In fact, strong correlation does not imply positive correlation; rather, it refers to the magnitude of the correlation. If two variables have correlation = -0.98, we would call that very strong correlation.
If caffeinated beverages were more strongly correlated with heart disease than was smoking, and the former pair's correlation was negative, the former correlation would overpower the latter and the argument would lose all force.
Thanks so much for all that this forum does! Interested to hear your thoughts on this.