X-axis
x-axis
x-axis
The dependent variable is shown on the vertical, or y-axis of a graph.
A pie graph does not have an axis.
The y-values (the second number) in each coordinate (point) given to you. For example, the point (4,8) would have a y-value of 8
x-axis
x-axis
X-Axis is manipulated variable. Y-Axis is responding variable
The manipulated variable goes on the horizontal axis.
The dependent variable is shown on the vertical, or y-axis of a graph.
The horizontal axis of a typical graph would be the "X-axis"
The manipulated variable is your independent variable. This gets plotted along the x-axis on a graph, and your dependent variable gets plotted along the y axis. Example- think of a velocity-time graph (physics), or a dose-response graph (pharmacology). The variable you are able to control (like time or dose) is your manipulated variable, and the variable whose value is contingent on how you manipulate the first is your dependent variable (drug response etc.)
The independent variable is usually on the bottom, running horizontally. The dependent variable is usually vertical, on the left of the graph.
The independent variable is the one which the researcher controls and manipulates. On a graph this is the 'x' axis.
A graph intersects the y-axis at the y-intercept; its x value is zero.
In a graph the vertical axis displays the y variablewhile the horizontal axis displays the x variable. The manipulated variable will be shown on the x axis while the responding variable will be shown on the y axis.
You put time on the horizontal axis and distance on the vertical axis.