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The variable that depends on the controlled variable is typically the dependent variable. This variable is measured or observed to see how it responds to changes in the controlled variable during an experiment or study.
The manipulated variable in an investigation is called the independent variable. It is the variable that is intentionally changed or controlled by the researcher to observe its effect on the dependent variable.
The variable that is manipulated by the researcher is the independent variable. This variable is controlled or changed by the researcher to observe its effect on the dependent variable.
Independent variable: the variable that is intentionally changed or manipulated by the researcher. Dependent variable: the variable that is measured and affected by changes in the independent variable. Control variable: a factor that is kept constant and not changed throughout the experiment to ensure that any observed effects are due to the independent variable.
manipulated variable!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
-- None of those words relates to "precise". -- "Accuracy" relates to "reliable". -- "Precision" and "accuracy" are two different things. -- "Precise" does not mean "reliable".
To declare a double precision variable in Fortran, you can use the "real(kind8)" declaration. This specifies that the variable should be of double precision, which is typically 8 bytes in size.
You can know which is the variable in a laboratory just by observation. The number of times that it has been used in the different procedures will also help you tell which is the variable.
precision
A loss of precision error occurs when you use a variable of a data type that holds more decimal values than the type of the variable you are converting/inserting to.
what is variable
Knowing which is the variable in a laboratory when designing a procedure will help you come up with a number experiments and their possible outcomes.
A variable that could influence the accuracy of an instrument is the reference standard that was used to calibrate the instrument.
According to the scientific method, any scientific experiment must be done at least 3 times. Also, only one variable can be changed in an experiment (the independent variable). Any more changes will will ruin your dependent variable (your results) and make your data unreliable. If your experiment fails, learn from it, redo the experiment, and change another variable.
A variable that could influence the accuracy of an instrument is the reference standard that was used to calibrate the instrument.
This value is variable, for each type of measurement.
It is a continuous variable. BUT as soon as you measure it, the limitations of your timing device make the observation a discrete variable - even if you can measure with an accuracy of a nanosecond.