Correlation is not causation

Correlation is not causation

Correlation is not causation

A scatter plot can show that two quantities tend to move together — that is called correlation. But correlation alone does not prove that one quantity causes the other.

A classic example

Ice-cream sales and the number of sunburns both rise in summer, so a scatter plot shows a positive association. But ice cream does not cause sunburn. A third factor — hot, sunny weather — drives both.

Why this matters

When you describe a scatter plot, you can say the two quantities are associated. Claiming one causes the other needs more than a graph — it needs an experiment or a clear explanation.

What you can say

  • "There is a positive (or negative) association." — safe from a scatter plot.
  • "One causes the other." — only with extra evidence.
  • Watch for a hidden third factor that might explain both.

Three rules that always help

  • A pattern shows association, not proof of cause.
  • Look for a hidden factor that could drive both quantities.
  • Describe the link; claim causes only with stronger evidence.

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