INTRODUCTION TO ECONOMETRICS II ECO 306 NOUN 31 14 9
7.50
-1.45
-6.725 28.579 15 15 5.00 1.75
-9.225
-16.143 16 12 21.63
-1.25 7.406
-9.257 17 16 12.10 2.75
-2.125
-5.842 18 12 5.55
-1.25
-8.675 10.843 19 12 7.50
-1.25
-6.725 8.406 20 14 8.00 0.75
-6.225
-4.668
Total 265 284.49
-
-
305.888
Average 13.250 14.225
-
-
15.294 Note from the above example that the association is positive. This is given by the positive covariance.
1.2.3.3 Population Covariance If
X and
Y are random variables, the expected value of the product of their deviations from their means is defined to
be the population covariance :
,(
)(
)-
…[2.20] Where
and
are the population means of
X and
Y, respectively.
As you would expect, if the population covariance is unknown, the sample covariance
will provide an estimate of it, given a sample of observations. However, the estimate will be biased downwards, for
, ( )-
…[2.21] The reason is that the sample deviations are measured
from the sample means of X and
Y and tend to underestimate the deviations from the true means. Therefore, we can construct an unbiased estimator by multiplying
the sample estimate by n/(
n–1).
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