scipy.stats.pointbiserialr¶
- scipy.stats.pointbiserialr(x, y)[source]¶
- Calculates a point biserial correlation coefficient and its p-value. - The point biserial correlation is used to measure the relationship between a binary variable, x, and a continuous variable, y. Like other correlation coefficients, this one varies between -1 and +1 with 0 implying no correlation. Correlations of -1 or +1 imply a determinative relationship. - This function uses a shortcut formula but produces the same result as pearsonr. - Parameters: - x : array_like of bools - Input array. - y : array_like - Input array. - Returns: - correlation : float - R value - pvalue : float - 2-tailed p-value - Notes - pointbiserialr uses a t-test with n-1 degrees of freedom. It is equivalent to pearsonr. - The value of the point-biserial correlation can be calculated from: \[r_{pb} = \frac{\overline{Y_{1}} - \overline{Y_{0}}}{s_{y}}\sqrt{\frac{N_{1} N_{2}}{N (N - 1))}}\]- Where \(Y_{0}\) and \(Y_{1}\) are means of the metric observations coded 0 and 1 respectively; \(N_{0}\) and \(N_{1}\) are number of observations coded 0 and 1 respectively; \(N\) is the total number of observations and \(s_{y}\) is the standard deviation of all the metric observations. - A value of \(r_{pb}\) that is significantly different from zero is completely equivalent to a significant difference in means between the two groups. Thus, an independent groups t Test with \(N-2\) degrees of freedom may be used to test whether \(r_{pb}\) is nonzero. The relation between the t-statistic for comparing two independent groups and \(r_{pb}\) is given by: \[t = \sqrt{N - 2}\frac{r_{pb}}{\sqrt{1 - r^{2}_{pb}}}\]- References - [R422] - J. Lev, “The Point Biserial Coefficient of Correlation”, Ann. Math. Statist., Vol. 20, no.1, pp. 125-126, 1949. - [R423] - R.F. Tate, “Correlation Between a Discrete and a Continuous Variable. Point-Biserial Correlation.”, Ann. Math. Statist., Vol. 25, np. 3, pp. 603-607, 1954. - [R424] - http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/9781118445112.stat06227/full - Examples - >>> from scipy import stats >>> a = np.array([0, 0, 0, 1, 1, 1, 1]) >>> b = np.arange(7) >>> stats.pointbiserialr(a, b) (0.8660254037844386, 0.011724811003954652) >>> stats.pearsonr(a, b) (0.86602540378443871, 0.011724811003954626) >>> np.corrcoef(a, b) array([[ 1. , 0.8660254], [ 0.8660254, 1. ]]) 
