Observation-Seeds placed in cotton germinate the same as seeds placed in soil,
Hypothesis- Seeds do not need soil for germination
Manipulating variables- soil, cotton
Responding- height of seeds germinated
A responding variable is a value of measure, that came from the manipulated and controlled variables.
In a controlled experiment, the manipulated variable, also known as the independent variable, is the factor that the experimenter changes intentionally to observe its effect. In contrast, the responding variable, or dependent variable, is the factor that is measured or observed to assess the impact of the manipulated variable. Essentially, the manipulated variable is what you change, while the responding variable is what you observe as a result of that change.
The manipulated variable, also known as the independent variable, is the factor that is intentionally changed or controlled in an experiment to observe its effects. The responding variable, or dependent variable, is the outcome that is measured to assess the impact of changes in the manipulated variable. Essentially, the relationship is that changes in the manipulated variable are expected to cause changes in the responding variable. This relationship is fundamental to understanding cause-and-effect in scientific experiments.
responding variable
dependent variable
The covered jar was the manipulated variable and the responding variable was the result: No maggots.
the manipulated variable was the covered jars . The responding variable was the uncovered jars contained any maggots
responding variable
"Controlled Variable" or "Manipulated Variable"
A manipulative variable is the variable you can alter, while the responding variable is the variable you have no control over. A manipulated variable is what is changed purposely throughout the experiment. The responding variable is which you have to measure to get your results I think. But the responding variable depends on the dependent variable. I believe I'm right!
A responding variable is a value of measure, that came from the manipulated and controlled variables.
In a controlled experiment, the manipulated variable, also known as the independent variable, is the factor that the experimenter changes intentionally to observe its effect. In contrast, the responding variable, or dependent variable, is the factor that is measured or observed to assess the impact of the manipulated variable. Essentially, the manipulated variable is what you change, while the responding variable is what you observe as a result of that change.
In Redi's experiment on spontaneous generation, the manipulated variable was the presence or absence of gauze on the jars to prevent flies from accessing the meat, while the responding variable was the presence or absence of maggots developing on the meat.
The manipulated variable, also known as the independent variable, is the factor that is intentionally changed or controlled in an experiment to observe its effects. The responding variable, or dependent variable, is the outcome that is measured to assess the impact of changes in the manipulated variable. Essentially, the relationship is that changes in the manipulated variable are expected to cause changes in the responding variable. This relationship is fundamental to understanding cause-and-effect in scientific experiments.
direct proportion
responding variable
cause a change