Example

Example of Misinterpreting Correlation: Breakfast Cereal

People frequently make the mistake of assuming causation from correlational data, a phenomenon especially common in news stories and advertisements. For instance, a research finding that people who eat a specific breakfast cereal have a reduced risk of heart disease might be heavily promoted by cereal companies. These companies may overstate the positive effects of their product by implying that eating the cereal directly causes better health, while ignoring alternative explanations for why cereal eaters might be healthier.

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Updated 2026-04-25

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