In this lesson:
By the end of this lesson, you should be able to:
Everyday claims quietly turn correlation into causation:
Most such leaps are unjustified. Let's build the habit to spot them.
In children, shoe size and reading ability correlate strongly.
"Move together" and "one causes the other" are different claims.
Two precise, different claims:
Exercise causes fitness (real mechanism); shoe size doesn't cause reading.
Force any statement into one of two molds:
One is an observed pattern; the other an asserted mechanism.
Label each statement:
Classify each, then advance.
Answer: 1. Correlation. 2. Causation. 3. Correlation.
A correlation is real — so something explains it.
Knowing the menu replaces the reflex "correlate, so cause."
Direct, reverse, lurking common cause, or coincidence — which fits?
The arrow's direction isn't given by the correlation:
Correlation is symmetric — it carries no direction.
Summer drives both — the ice-cream–drowning link is real but not causal.
Sometimes two variables move together by pure chance.
Not every correlation means anything — some are coincidence.
Finding the lurking variable doesn't erase the correlation:
The relationship is real; the cause story is what's wrong.
Pick the explanation; name any lurking variable:
Explain each, then advance.
Answer: 1. Lurking: fire size. 2. Lurking: sun exposure. 3. Lurking: national wealth.
A lurking variable can always hide behind a correlation.
That evidence is the randomized experiment.
An observational study just watches what already happens.
Observation reveals correlation, not a single cause.
Don't dismiss correlation just because it isn't cause:
A useful tool with a limit — not a trap to discard.
"Coffee drinkers live longer." Walk the questions:
The causal claim isn't justified — only an association.
"Students who eat breakfast score higher on tests."
Decide, then advance.
Answer: Observational; lurking variable like home stability or income; cause not justified.
A correlation: neighborhoods with more bookstores have higher incomes.
Do all three, then advance.
Answer: Lurking (wealth draws bookstores); no, it's observational; only an experiment could.
✓ Correlation and causation are different claims
✓ Ask "what else explains this?" — reverse, lurking, coincidence
✓ Only a randomized experiment establishes cause
A lurking variable makes the correlation real, the cause false
Correlation is still useful — it predicts and flags
Next: study design (HSS.IC).
Click to begin the narrated lesson
Distinguish correlation from causation