4.2 Article

Is the property of being positively correlated transitive?

Journal

AMERICAN STATISTICIAN
Volume 55, Issue 4, Pages 322-325

Publisher

AMER STATISTICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1198/000313001753272286

Keywords

correlation

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Suppose that X, Y, and Z are random variables and that X and Y are positively correlated and that Y and Z are likewise positively correlated. Does it follow that X and Z must be positively correlated? As we shall see by example, the answer is (perhaps surprisingly) no, We prove, though, that if the correlations are sufficiently close to 1, then X and Z must be positively correlated. We also prove a general inequality that relates the three correlations. The ideas should be accessible to, students in a first (postcalculus) course in probability and statistics.

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