Pearson's correlation is a measure of linear relationship between two variables, which ranges from +1 to -1. A correlation of +1 indicates a perfect positive linear relationship between variables.
This is different from the Spearman statistic which analyzes the same sequence of 4, 7, 7, 20 as 1, 2.5, 2.5, 3.

| Term | Description |
|---|---|
| ni+ | number of observations in the ith row |
| n+j | number of observations in the jth column |
| nij | observations in the cell corresponding to the ith row and jth column |
| n++ | total number of observations |
Spearman's rho is a measure of the linear relationship between two variables. Spearman's differs from Pearson's correlation only because the computations are done after the numbers are converted to ranks.

If i = 1, then:

If i = 2, 3,..., r, then:

If j = 1, then:

If j = 2, 3,..., c, then:

| Term | Description |
|---|---|
| c | number of columns |
| r | number of rows |
| ni+ | number of observations in the ith row |
| n+j | number of observations in the jth column |
| nij | observations in the cell corresponding to the ith row and jth column |
| n++ | total number of observations |