the different between cause and effect.... cause=what cause the problem or what cause it to become a problem effect=what effect did it have on it hope that help u(:
Effect is what it changes or causes the subject to do. Effectiveness is how likely the effect will cause these changes in the subject.
Correlation is a relationship between two variables where they change together, but it does not imply causation. Cause and effect, on the other hand, indicates that one variable directly influences the other.
Cause is the reason something happens. For instance, the cause of something falling is gravity. Effectis the result that happens due to the cause. For instance, the effect of gravity is the falling of the object. They are pretty much opposite.
Illegal logging and effect is flood
acute injury = immediate effect, often easy to accurately relate cause of effect. overuse injury = due to increase frequency, difficult to accurately relate cause of effect
A mutagen is a substance that CAUSES a mutation. Essentially, mutagens are the cause, mutations are the effect. Simple as that :)
you learn to like them
Cause and effect in research studies refer to a direct relationship where one variable causes a change in another variable. Correlation, on the other hand, indicates a relationship between two variables but does not imply causation. In simpler terms, cause and effect shows a clear cause-and-effect relationship, while correlation shows a connection between variables without proving one causes the other.
Effect is the outcome of a circumstance and cause it what made it happen... For example the cause of acid rain is increased amounts of pollution in the atmostphere and one of the effects acid rain incurs is the wearing down of limestone buildings.
cause is what made something happen. Effect is what was the result was.
There are three conditions that must be present to show causality: 1) there must be a strong correlation between the proposed cause and effect, 2) the proposed cause must precede the effect in time, and 3) the cause has to be present whenever the effect occurs (Burns & Grove, 2001, p. 791).