What is the difference between correlation and causation?

Causation and correlation are two ways variables can be related.

Causation means changes in one variable directly lead to changes in another (i.e., there is a cause-and-effect relationship). For example, eating food (the cause) satisfies hunger (the effect).

Correlation means there is a statistical relationship between two variables—as one changes, so does the other. However, this relationship is not necessarily causal. For example, although a child’s shoe size and their reading ability are correlated, one does not cause the other (instead, they’re both influenced by a third variable, age).