In an experiment, variables that should be controlled include extraneous variables that could influence the outcome, such as temperature, humidity, and light conditions. Additionally, it is important to control participant characteristics, such as age and gender, to ensure consistency across groups. By controlling these variables, researchers can isolate the effects of the independent variable on the dependent variable, enhancing the validity of the results.
Constants are factors in an experiment that stay the same. This should not be confused with controls -- which is a standard used for comparison
An experiment in which all variables stay the same is called a "controlled experiment".
An experiment of any kind can have infinitely many variables. A controlled experiment can have just as many, provided that all but one are kept exactly the same.
Dependent Variable
It depends on the experiment. Normally only one is tested at a time because they can affect the experiment. Variables are tested in a controlled experiment to see whether they affect the outcome and also how.
Controlled variables are quantities that must remain constant.
Some controlled variables when using a lemon for an experiment could be its size, ripeness, temperature, and the method of extraction of the lemon juice. These variables should be kept constant throughout the experiment to ensure that any changes observed are due to the manipulated independent variable and not these controlled variables.
Constants are factors in an experiment that stay the same. This should not be confused with controls -- which is a standard used for comparison
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.
The Variables!!
A controlled experiment is an experiment where there are limited or no variables other than the one you are testing for.
They are the same. These are names for the variables in an experiment that are controlled by the experimenter, as opposed to the output variables, the results you collect at the end of the experiment Hope this helped!
variables and enviornment conditions are controlled
An experiment in which all variables stay the same is called a "controlled experiment".
An experiment of any kind can have infinitely many variables. A controlled experiment can have just as many, provided that all but one are kept exactly the same.
Dependent Variable
The controlled variables.