0% found this document useful (0 votes)
815 views

Table of Critical Values For R

This document contains a table of critical values for Pearson's r, which is a measure of correlation between two variables. The table provides critical r values for different levels of significance (p-values) and degrees of freedom, for both one-tailed and two-tailed tests. The critical r values indicate the minimum correlation required to reject the null hypothesis of no correlation between variables.
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
815 views

Table of Critical Values For R

This document contains a table of critical values for Pearson's r, which is a measure of correlation between two variables. The table provides critical r values for different levels of significance (p-values) and degrees of freedom, for both one-tailed and two-tailed tests. The critical r values indicate the minimum correlation required to reject the null hypothesis of no correlation between variables.
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 1

Table of Critical Values for Pearsons r

df
1
2
3
4
5

Level of Significance for a One-Tailed Test


.10
.05
.025
.01
.005
Level of Significance for a Two-Tailed Test
.20
.10
.05
.02
.01
0.951
0.988
0.997
0.9995
0.9999
0.800
0.900
0.950
0.980
0.990
0.687
0.805
0.878
0.934
0.959
0.608
0.729
0.811
0.882
0.917
0.551
0.669
0.755
0.833
0.875

.0005
.001
0.99999
0.999
0.991
0.974
0.951

6
7
8
9
10

0.507
0.472
0.443
0.419
0.398

0.621
0.582
0.549
0.521
0.497

0.707
0.666
0.632
0.602
0.576

0.789
0.750
0.715
0.685
0.658

0.834
0.798
0.765
0.735
0.708

0.925
0.898
0.872
0.847
0.823

11
12
13
14
15

0.380
0.365
0.351
0.338
0.327

0.476
0.457
0.441
0.426
0.412

0.553
0.532
0.514
0.497
0.482

0.634
0.612
0.592
0.574
0.558

0.684
0.661
0.641
0.623
0.606

0.801
0.780
0.760
0.742
0.725

16
17
18
19
20

0.317
0.308
0.299
0.291
0.284

0.400
0.389
0.378
0.369
0.360

0.468
0.456
0.444
0.433
0.423

0.542
0.529
0.515
0.503
0.492

0.590
0.575
0.561
0.549
0.537

0.708
0.693
0.679
0.665
0.652

21
22
23
24
25

0.277
0.271
0.265
0.260
0.255

0.352
0.344
0.337
0.330
0.323

0.413
0.404
0.396
0.388
0.381

0.482
0.472
0.462
0.453
0.445

0.526
0.515
0.505
0.496
0.487

0.640
0.629
0.618
0.607
0.597

26
27
28
29
30

0.250
0.245
0.241
0.237
0.233

0.317
0.311
0.306
0.301
0.296

0.374
0.367
0.361
0.355
0.349

0.437
0.430
0.423
0.416
0.409

0.479
0.471
0.463
0.456
0.449

0.588
0.579
0.570
0.562
0.554

40
60
12
0

0.202
0.165

0.257
0.211

0.304
0.250

0.358
0.295

0.393
0.325

0.490
0.408

0.117
0.057

0.150
0.073

0.178
0.087

0.210
0.103

0.232
0.114

0.294
0.146

Adapted from Appendix 2 (Critical Values of t) using the square root of [t2/(t2 + df)]
Note: Critical values for Infinite df actually calculated for df= 500.

You might also like