Fig. 1: Variable Intercorrelations. | Communications Psychology

Fig. 1: Variable Intercorrelations.

From: Intergroup psychological interventions highlighting commonalities can increase the perceived legitimacy of critical voices

Fig. 1

The heatmap displays Pearson correlation coefficients (r) between all study variables for the full T1 sample (n = 2433). Positive correlations are shown in blue colors, and negative correlations in reddish-orange colors. The intensity of the color indicates the strength of the correlation, with darker colors representing stronger relationships. White represents correlations near zero. Statistical significance is indicated by asterisks (*p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001). Correlation values are displayed in each cell with corresponding significance markers. Non-significant correlations are displayed in lighter shades. Variables are clustered hierarchically based on similarity of correlation patterns. This visualization uses a colorblind-friendly blue/reddish-orange diverging palette that maintains distinction for all types of color vision.

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