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p, r, and the Coefficient of Determination Many researchers seem to get carried away with the p-levels associated with their correlation coeffcients and thus seem to forget that the estimated strength of a relationship is best assessed by squaring the sample value of r. Discovering that a correlation coefficient is "significant" may not really be very important--even if the results indicate p < .01 or p < .001--unless the value of r2 is reasonably high. The result may be significant in a statistical sense (thus indicating that the sample data are not likely to have come from a population characterized by Ho), but it may be quite insignificant in a practical sense. (From Chapter 9, p. 217) |
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2003 Schuyler W. Huck |
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