REMEMBER:ReaDY MIX.....it helps me every time... MIX stands for Manipulated Independent X-axis......so the answer would be:Independent....hope this helps!:D
Actually since the manipulated variable is independent the the factor that would change would be the responding variable which is the dependent variable so the answer would be:
Dependent or Responding Variable
The factor that changes is the responding variable. This is because the manipulated variable is changed. Say you have 2 pieces of ice (responding variable). They were both the same volume (responding variable) and had the same heat source (responding variable), but they were different shapes (manipulated/independent variable). One is a cube and the other is a rectangular prism. The experiment is to see which piece of ice will melt faster. Imagine the cubed shape piece of ice melted first. Then there would be a piece of ice and a puddle of water. The state of matter was changed, which was a responding variable (the pieces of ice). Now that the state of matter has changed the responding variable has changed. That is how the manipulated variable can affect the responding variable.
independent variable
Independent Variable
Independent variable
independent variable
variable
Observation
When conducting scientific experiments, the researcher manipulates an "independent variable" (i.e., some physical parameter that can be controlled) in order to measure the effects of such manipulation on a "dependent variable" (i.e., the results of changing the physical parameter of interest). For example, one could lower the temperature in a refrigerator (the temperature being an independent variable) and wait to observe when water left in the refrigerator turns to ice (the change from liquid water to the solid form being the dependent variable). Thus, the change in the dependent variable depends on the manipulation of the independent variable. The independent variable is the variable you change, the dependant variable is what changes as a result of what you change.
The definition of variable motion is direction and/or changes in speed. This can refer to anything from walking to driving a car.
An unexposed subject is the "control" for the experiment. The purpose is to establish an idea of what would normally occur outside the testing procedure. Similarly, in human tests, an inactive "placebo" is given to some subjects to verify that the changes occur independently of the psychosomatic (belief-driven) effects. In a "double blind' experiment, the person distributing the medication also does not know whether any particular individual is receiving the actual drug or a placebo. This is hidden in coded form until the results are recorded.
The variable gases are are those atmospheric gases whose concentrations vary through time. The variable gases are sometimes called the "minor gases" because they make up such a small percentage of the atmosphere by volume.. Carbon dioxide, methane, and water vapor are examples of variable gases.
The Dependent Variable
Moho
Manipulated variable
responding variable
manipulated variable
manipulated variable
manipulated variable
It means the factor that changes as a result of changes to the manipulated, or independent, variable in an experiment; also called dependent variable.
The factor in an experiment that responds to the manipulated variable
it is basically asking what the definition of responding variable is and the book says, The variable that changes because of the manipulated variable is the responding variable.
The manipulated/independent variable is a variable that changes and it is what the responding/dependent variable change because of the manipulated variable.
The dependent variable is the variable that can change in an experiment.