Indeed, one could easily correlate anti social pathologies with Democrat voters.
From the heraldtribune.com
Most experiments show that one neural correlate of attention is enhanced firing.
From the en.wikipedia.org
There have been countless studies that correlate having written goals to success.
From the democratandchronicle.com
In reality, tests of emotional intelligence correlate positively with IQ tests.
From the online.wsj.com
The gardens will correlate with stories as well as offer an outside reading area.
From the newsday.com
In every generation, mutations are introduced that have no phenotype correlate.
From the scienceblogs.com
And for all those citing that turnover does not correlate with profit, it does.
From the expressandstar.com
Studies show self ratings of health correlate highly with physicians'assessments.
From the sciencedaily.com
However, many properties of sunspots and active regions correlate with flaring.
From the en.wikipedia.org
More examples
Correlative: mutually related
To bear a reciprocal or mutual relation; "Do these facts correlate?"
Either of two or more related or complementary variables
(correlation) a reciprocal relation between two or more things
Correlation coefficient: a statistic representing how closely two variables co-vary; it can vary from -1 (perfect negative correlation) through 0 (no correlation) to +1 (perfect positive correlation); "what is the correlation between those two variables?"
(Correlation (projective geometry)) A correlation is a reciprocity (collineation from a projective space onto its dual space, taking points to hyperplanes and preserving incidence) with the identity as the associated automorphism.
(Correlated) Wallcoverings and fabrics designed to be used together. They are known as correlates or companions.
(correlated) Having a mutual or reciprocal relationship. Fitting together and varying together. See text, Chapter 13. See also, "coefficient of correlation," "mean," "regression" and "standard deviation."
(correlated) When observations are correlated, there are two or more observations (or derived quantities), which have at least one common source of error.