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In probability theory and related fields, the life-time of correlation measures the timespan over which there is appreciable autocorrelation or cross-correlation in stochastic processes.
Definition
editCorrelation | Negative | Positive |
---|---|---|
Weak | −0.5 to 0.0 | 0.0 to 0.5 |
Strong | −1.0 to −0.5 | 0.5 to 1.0 |
The correlation coefficient ρ, expressed as an autocorrelation function or cross-correlation function, depends on the lag-time between the times being considered. Typically such functions, ρ(t), decay to zero with increasing lag-time, but they can assume values across all levels of correlations: strong and weak, and positive and negative as in the table.
The life-time of a correlation is defined as the length of time when the correlation coefficient is at the strong level.[1] The durability of correlation is determined by signal (the strong level of correlation is separated from weak and negative levels). The mean life-time of correlation could measure how the durability of correlation depends on the window width size (the window is the length of time series used to calculate correlation).
References
edit- ^ Buda, Andrzej; Jarynowski, Andrzej (2010) Life-time of correlations and its applications vol.1, p.9, [Głogów] : Wydawnictwo Niezależne