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Independent and dependent variables are the variables that change during the course of an experiment. An example might be an experiment on how temperature affects plant growth. Changing the temperature is the independent variable, while the level of plant growth that results is the dependent variable.
dependent variable; this is the factor in a experiment that when manipulated by independent variables it changes. it is also known as a controlled variable independent variables or manipulated variable; the factor in a experiment that is deliberately manipulated responding variable; the factor you have to measure to get the results or you will not know the value of the variable
In an experiment, the condition manipulated by a biologist is known as the independent variable. The condition that changes based upon how the independent variable was manipulated is known as the dependent variable.
Scientifically, independent refers to the direct opposite of dependant. The dependant variable is varied deliberately and systematically by the experimenter, and the summary of the independent variables form the results of the experiment. Example: Experiment to determine tensile strength of lumber. Method: Add 10kg weights to sample lumber and observe results (dependant variable is number of 10 kg weights) Results: 1...2...3...4...5...6CRASH 'CRASH' = Independent variable, proving tensile strength > 60kg (dependant variable)
In an experiment, the independent variable is altered, and the effect observed is the dependent variable, or outcome. The controlled variable is intended to be kept the same throughout the experiment so that changes in it do not affect the results.
Independent variables are variables that can be changed in an experiment, while dependent variables are variables that change as a result of an experiment. In other words, independent variables are what you change, and dependent variables are the results of the experiment.
Most science experiments will have two independent variables. Fundamentally, an experiment will want as few variables as possible for better results.
Yes, independant variables are the variables that are changed in an experiment to observe the results, called the dependant variable.
If you change the variables in a science experiment, you will probably get different results.
Independent and dependent variables are the variables that change during the course of an experiment. An example might be an experiment on how temperature affects plant growth. Changing the temperature is the independent variable, while the level of plant growth that results is the dependent variable.
An Independent variable is what you control; you decide the focus of your experiment and what you control on the independent variable. Dependent variable is what you want to look at or find results for; you decide what you want to see from manipulating your independent variable.
dependent variable; this is the factor in a experiment that when manipulated by independent variables it changes. it is also known as a controlled variable independent variables or manipulated variable; the factor in a experiment that is deliberately manipulated responding variable; the factor you have to measure to get the results or you will not know the value of the variable
In an experiment, the condition manipulated by a biologist is known as the independent variable. The condition that changes based upon how the independent variable was manipulated is known as the dependent variable.
Independent variable is the one to be investigated; the one that will be changed to get results. If you are still finding it too hard just keep this in your mind-- Independent variables answer the question "What do I change?" in an experiment. Dependent variables answer the question "What do I observe?"!
Scientifically, independent refers to the direct opposite of dependant. The dependant variable is varied deliberately and systematically by the experimenter, and the summary of the independent variables form the results of the experiment. Example: Experiment to determine tensile strength of lumber. Method: Add 10kg weights to sample lumber and observe results (dependant variable is number of 10 kg weights) Results: 1...2...3...4...5...6CRASH 'CRASH' = Independent variable, proving tensile strength > 60kg (dependant variable)
You are either talking about the independent variables or the control group
In an experiment, the independent variable is altered, and the effect observed is the dependent variable, or outcome. The controlled variable is intended to be kept the same throughout the experiment so that changes in it do not affect the results.