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It depends what kind of experiment you do. For some you just need one. For others you may change two variables. In most cases you only change one
An experiment involves three types of variable.The independent variable is the one you are investigating. It is the one which you deliberately vary in the experiment. You should only have one independent variable.The dependent variable is the variable which you measure to get your results. Often there is only a single dependent variable but there can be more.All other variables must be controlled ie kept constant so they do not change the result. There are usually many control variables in an experiment.
ONE :)
A researcher should focus on a manageable number of variables, typically one to three independent variables, to maintain clarity in their investigation. This allows for a more controlled experiment, enabling the researcher to isolate the effects of those variables on the dependent variable. Too many variables can complicate the analysis and interpretation of results, making it difficult to draw meaningful conclusions. Ultimately, the goal is to balance comprehensiveness with clarity.
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It depends what kind of experiment you do. For some you just need one. For others you may change two variables. In most cases you only change one
A experiment should only have one variable.
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To eliminate confounding variables, or variables that were not controlled and damaged the validity of the experiment by affecting the dependent and independent variable, the experimenter should plan ahead. They should run many checks before actually running an experiment.
An experiment involves three types of variable.The independent variable is the one you are investigating. It is the one which you deliberately vary in the experiment. You should only have one independent variable.The dependent variable is the variable which you measure to get your results. Often there is only a single dependent variable but there can be more.All other variables must be controlled ie kept constant so they do not change the result. There are usually many control variables in an experiment.
An experiment involves three types of variable.The independent variable is the one you are investigating. It is the one which you deliberately vary in the experiment. You should only have one independent variable.The dependent variable is the variable which you measure to get your results. Often there is only a single dependent variable but there can be more.All other variables must be controlled ie kept constant so they do not change the result. There are usually many control variables in an experiment.
ONE :)
A researcher should focus on a manageable number of variables, typically one to three independent variables, to maintain clarity in their investigation. This allows for a more controlled experiment, enabling the researcher to isolate the effects of those variables on the dependent variable. Too many variables can complicate the analysis and interpretation of results, making it difficult to draw meaningful conclusions. Ultimately, the goal is to balance comprehensiveness with clarity.
There should be one dependent variables. Depending on the type of research you are doing, the amount of independent variables will change. If you are doing research on a large scale, you will use more independent variables. If it's on a small scale, you will use very little. If you are not able to run your regression it means your sample size is too small or you have too many independent variables.
true or false : in order to get the best results from an experiment, change as many variables as possible within the experiment?