I have some data at hand, I want to correlate them, but I do not know what is the equation I should need, how can I do it ?
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I have a lot  data at hand, I want to correlate them, but I do not know what is the equation I should need, how can I do it ? Does anyone know how to deal with it ?
8 Comments
  dpb
      
      
 on 6 Jul 2020
				No, because I can't see your data, either...nor do I have even whatever knowledge about what the data might happen to be that you have by being your data -- that should  tell you something about what relationships might be.
Answers (1)
  Puru Kathuria
    
 on 16 Jul 2020
        
      Edited: Puru Kathuria
    
 on 16 Jul 2020
  
      Hi, 
Assuming your data has more than one features/variables, say M features and N data points. 
Now, correlation can be observed between any pair of features and it can tell you how strongly are those variables related. 
Correlation among those variables can be positive(when both variables grow in the same direction), negative(when variables grow in the opposite direction) or no correlation at all. 
Now that we know something about correlation, there are multiple ways to observe it in the data. 
First, you can plot your pair of variables and analyse the plots visually, this can be done using pair plotting [Link1, Link2, Link3]. Using this technique you will see C(M,2) number of plots, thus we prefer this plot when we have a limited number of variables to analyse.  
Second, you can find a linear correlation coefficient, Pearson’s coefficient[Link4] is the most commonly used. This acts as a metric to calculate the correlation among variables. This correlation coefficient ranges from −1 to 1, where 1 implies perfect positive correlation, -1 implies a perfect negative correlation and 0 implies no correlation. [Link5]
Note: For MATLAB specific implementation check out the above mentioned links in the name of Link1, Link2, Link3, Link4 and Link5.
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