yes
Control Experiment
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.
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
Yes.
well, for starters the independent variable is the one that "I" change, which is you. so the things that you changed would the environment each bananas were put in or the type of banana etc
It is called a controlled experiment.
Controlled Experiment :Pcontrolled experiment.
a controlled experiment
controlled experiment
Controlled experiment
an experiment that has only one variable
Controlled Experiment :Pcontrolled experiment.
a controlled experiment must have only one manipulated variable becuase if the experiment had multiple manipulated variables then it would not be a controlled experiment anymore it would be a manipulated Deseret experiment
a controlled experiment
a controlled experiment
a controlled experiment
a controlled experiment