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Q: What is the underlying variable of IQ scores or intelligence would be an example of what type of scale?
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What should the independent variable be?

The answer depends on what the experiment is about. For example, if you believe (or want to test) that pupils' scores in English tests depend on their scores in maths tests, then the independent variable is the maths score. But if you believe that the English scores influence their maths scores then the independent variable is the maths score.


What is the analysis in which scores of individuals on one variable are used to predict the scores of the same individuals on another variable?

reporcoal


What is an analysis in which scores of individuals on one variable are used to predict the scores of the same individuals on another variable?

reporcoal


What correllation is discovered when higher scores on one variable is associated with lower scores on another variable?

A negative correlation


What are examples of dependent and independent variables in sports?

For example, the amount of goals a team scores depends on the amount of games the team get to play. So, the independent variable would be number of games in a season and the dependent variable would be how many goals the team scores in this situation.


An experiment is done to see if eating breakfast affects students performance on exams is the experimental variable the scores on the exams?

No, the scores are the results, the data. The variable would be the food.


Are there racial differences in IQ scores?

No the IQ test is racially blind. It scores you purely on intelligence and nothing more.


A variable that consists of indivisible categories with no other scores existing between neighboring categories is called a variable?

discrete


The intelligence test scores of adopted children are least likely to be positively correlated with the scores of their adoptive siblings during?

early adulthood


Is it possible to overstimulate an infant or toddler to improve their intelligence test scores?

no it effects them


What is test bias?

The differences in test scores, or predictions from those scores, between two or more subgroups of the population that are matched on the underlying construct being measured.


The intelligence test scores of adopted children are least likely to be positively correlated with the scores of their adoptive siblings during what age?

Early adulthood