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Simple Linear Regression and Correlation

Simple Linear Regression and Correlation. Introduction. Regression refers to the statistical technique of modeling the relationship between variables. In simple linear regression , we model the relationship between two variables .

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Simple Linear Regression and Correlation

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  1. Simple Linear Regression and Correlation

  2. Introduction • Regressionrefers to the statistical technique of modeling the relationship between variables. • Insimple linearregression, we model the relationship between two variables. • One of the variables, denoted by Y, is called thedependent variable and the other, denoted by X, is called theindependent variable. • The model we will use to depict the relationship between X and Y will be astraight-line relationship. • Agraphical sketch of the pairs (X, Y) is called ascatter plot.

  3. This scatterplotlocates pairs of observations of advertising expenditures on the x-axis and sales on the y-axis. We notice that: • Larger (smaller) values of sales tend to be associated with larger (smaller) values of advertising. S c a t t e r p l o t o f A d v e r t i s i n g E x p e n d i t u r e s ( X ) a n d S a l e s ( Y ) 1 4 0 1 2 0 1 0 0 s 8 0 e l a S 6 0 4 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 3 0 4 0 5 0 A d v e r t i s i n g • The scatter of points tends to be distributed around a positively sloped straight line. • The pairs of values of advertising expenditures and sales are not located exactly on a straight line. • The scatter plot reveals a more or less strong tendency rather than a precise linear relationship. • The line represents the nature of the relationship on average. Using Statistics

  4. 0 0 Y Y Y 0 0 0 X X Y Y Y X X X Examples of Other Scatterplots X

  5. Simple Linear Regression Model • The equation that describes how y is related to x and • an error term is called the regression model. • The simple linear regression model is: y = a+ bx +e where: • a and b are called parameters of the model, • a is the intercept and b is the slope. • e is a random variable called the error term.

  6. The relationship between X and Y is a straight-line relationship. The errors i are normally distributed with mean 0 and variance 2. The errors are uncorrelated (not related) in successive observations. That is: ~ N(0,2) Assumptions of the Simple Linear Regression Model Y E[Y]=0 + 1 X Identical normal distributions of errors, all centered on the regression line. X Assumptions of the Simple Linear Regression Model

  7. Errors in Regression Y . { X Xi

  8. SIMPLE REGRESSION AND CORRELATION Estimating Using the Regression Line First, lets look at the equation of a straight line is: Independent variable Dependent variable Slope of the line Y-intercept

  9. SIMPLE REGRESSION AND CORRELATION The Method of Least Squares To estimate the straight line we have to use the least squares method. This method minimizes the sum of squares of error between the estimated points on the line and the actual observed points.

  10. SIMPLE REGRESSION AND CORRELATION The estimating line Slope of the best-fitting Regression Line Y-intercept of the Best-fitting Regression Line

  11. SIMPLE REGRESSION - EXAMPLE Suppose an appliance store conducts a five-month experiment to determine the effect of advertising on sales revenue. The results are shown below. (File PPT_Regr_example.sav) Month Advertising Exp.($100s)Sales Rev.($1000S) 1 11 2 21 3 32 4 42 5 54

  12. SIMPLE REGRESSION - EXAMPLE XYX2XY 11 11 2 1 4 2 3 29 6 4216 8 54 2520

  13. SIMPLE REGRESSION - EXAMPLE b = 0.7

  14. Standard Error of Estimate The standard error of estimate is used to measure the reliability of the estimating equation. It measures the variability or scatter of the observed values around the regression line.

  15. Standard Error of Estimate Standard Error of Estimate Short-cut

  16. Standard Error of Estimate Y2 1 1 4 4 16

  17. Correlation Analysis • Correlation analysis is used to describe • the degree to which one variable is • linearly related to another. • There are two measures for describing • correlation: • The Coefficient of Correlation • The Coefficient of Determination

  18. Correlation The correlationbetween two random variables, X and Y, is a measure of the degree of linear associationbetween the two variables. The population correlation, denoted by, can take on any value from -1 to 1.    indicates a perfect negative linear relationship -1 <  < 0 indicates a negative linear relationship    indicates no linear relationship 0 <  < 1 indicates a positive linear relationship    indicates a perfect positive linear relationship The absolute value of  indicates the strength or exactness of the relationship.

  19. Y Y Y  = -1  = 0  = 1 X X X Y Y Y  = -.8  = 0  = .8 X X X Illustrations of Correlation

  20. The coefficient of correlation: Sample Coefficient of Determination Alternate Formula

  21. Sample Coefficient of Determination Interpretation: Percentage of total variation explained by the regression. We can conclude that 81.67 % of the variation in the sales revenues is explain by the variation in advertising expenditure.

  22. The Coefficient of Correlation or Karl Pearson’s Coefficient of Correlation The coefficient of correlation is the square root of the coefficient of determination. The sign of r indicates the direction of the relationship between the two variables X and Y. The sign of r will be the same as the sign of the coefficient “b” in the regression equation Y = a + b X

  23. SIMPLE REGRESSION AND CORRELATION :- r is the positive square root :- r is the negative square root If the slope of the estimating line is positive If the slope of the estimating line is negative The relationship between the two variables is direct

  24. H0:  = 0 (No linear relationship) H1:   0 (Some linear relationship) Test Statistic: Hypothesis Tests for the Correlation Coefficient

  25. Analysis-of-Variance Table and an F Test of the Regression Model H0 : The regression model is not significant H1 : The regression model is significant

  26. Testing for the existence of linear relationship • We pose the question: Is the independent variable linearly related to the dependent variable? • To answer the question we test the hypothesis H0: b = 0 H1: b is not equal to zero. • If b is not equal to zero, the model has some validity. Test statistic, with n-2 degrees of freedom:

  27. Alternately, R2 = 1-[SS(Residual) / SS(Total)] = 1-(1.1/6.0)=0.817 When adjusted for degrees of freedom, Adjusted R2 = 1-[SSResidual/(n-k-1)] / [SS(Total)/(n-1)] = 1-[1.1//3]/[6/4] = 0.756

  28. Test Statistic Value of the test statistic: The p-value is 0.035 Conclusion: There is sufficient evidence to reject the null hypothesis in favor of the alternative hypothesis. b is not equal to zero. Thus, the independent variable is linearly related to y. This linear regression model is valid

  29. Test statistic, with n-2 degrees of freedom: Rejection Region Value of the test statistic: Conclusion: The calculated test statistic is 3.66 which is outside the acceptance region. Alternately, the actual significance is 0.035. Therefore we will reject the null hypothesis. The advertising expenses is a significant explanatory variable.

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