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Apr 2 at 18:56 answer added J-J-J timeline score: 2
Mar 28 at 16:33 comment added Monica Magdy Okay, thank you.
Mar 28 at 14:36 comment added Dave You can just say what the correlation values are. The categories are arbitrary for Pearson correlation, anyway.
Mar 28 at 14:33 comment added Monica Magdy I need the very strong, strong, moderate, weak and negligible ranges to classify my data, i.e to say that x & y have moderate correlation but x and z are strongly correlated
Mar 28 at 3:12 comment added Dave So calculate the correlations. What’s the problem?
Mar 28 at 0:35 comment added Monica Magdy I'm calculating correlations between different metrics in a quantum circuit and I need to distinguish between metrics that are strongly correlated and other ones that are weakly correlated. @J-J-J
Mar 18 at 9:20 review Close votes
Mar 18 at 13:53
Mar 18 at 8:59 comment added J-J-J Hi Monica and welcome on this site! I agree with @Dave. Thresholds like that are controversial in the first place, and their relevance is very dependent on the context of your research. There are many questions and answers on this website about this general issue (see stats.stackexchange.com/q/30118/164936, stats.stackexchange.com/q/126463/164936 , or stats.stackexchange.com/q/432661/164936 for some examples). So you should mention why you need this, otherwise I don't think it's possible to give you a good, precise answer, which is relevant to your specific situation.
Mar 12 at 13:50 comment added Dave Welcome to Cross Validated! The notions of “strong” and “weak” correlations are murky. Why do you need such words when you have the calculated value?
Mar 12 at 12:30 history edited Monica Magdy CC BY-SA 4.0
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S Mar 12 at 4:53 review First questions
Mar 12 at 5:10
S Mar 12 at 4:53 history asked Monica Magdy CC BY-SA 4.0