independent variables are quantities which are not affected by another quantities...for eg. time....mass of a stationary body etc....whereas dependent quantities depend on other physical quantities like weight of a body that at any instant of time depends on the height at which the object is located above surface of earth
dependent mean dependent othewise not dependent
An "hypothesis" doesn't have independent and dependent variables until you design an experiment to test it. If you want to test the effect that salt in solution has on the freezing point of the solution, then the independent variable is the presence, absence, or concentration of the salt. The dependent variable is the freezing temperature you measure in each condition.
Independent and dependent are types of variables. These variables are used mostly in science and math. When using independent variables you can control them dependent variables you cannot.
Dependent variable change and independent variables do not change.
the independent variable controls the dependent variables
Every time the independent variables change, the dependent variables change.Dependent variables cannot change if the independent variables didn't change.
it is....
Ex Post Facto (also called Causal Comparative Research) is useful whenever: • We have two groups which differ on an independent variable and we want to test hypotheses about differences on one or more dependent variables OR • We have two groups which already differ on a dependent variable and we want to test hypotheses about differences on one or more independent variables
Ex Post Facto (also called Causal Comparative Research) is useful whenever: • We have two groups which differ on an independent variable and we want to test hypotheses about differences on one or more dependent variables OR • We have two groups which already differ on a dependent variable and we want to test hypotheses about differences on one or more independent variables
Independent variables are those that you change in an experiment. Dependent variables are the ones that you measure in an experiment. Dependent variables are influenced by the independent variables that you change, so they are dependent upon the independent variable. Generally, experiments should have only one independent variable.
The test variable (independent variable) controls the outcome variable (dependent variable).
Independent variables are the input value of a function (usually x) and dependent variables are the output value of the function (usually y).