Usually the x-axis.
The x-axis usually represents the independent variable, while the y-axis represents the dependent variable.
independant variable
Generally speaking, yes. The variable x is generally used as the independent variable. And y is generally the variable the depends on the value of x. So in most examples the x axis and the "independent" axis are the same.
X goes on the x-axis, and y goes on the y-axis....
Yes, and the independent variable is on the x-axis.
It is often the horizontal (x-) axis.
X-Axis is manipulated variable. Y-Axis is responding variable
The x-axis usually represents the independent variable, while the y-axis represents the dependent variable.
Dependent variable Responding variable Y axis Manipulated variable Independent variable X axis,
x-axis
x-axis
In a graph the vertical axis displays the y variablewhile the horizontal axis displays the x variable. The manipulated variable will be shown on the x axis while the responding variable will be shown on the y axis.
---Manipulated, which is also called the independentvariable.
The independent variable is usually on the bottom, running horizontally. The dependent variable is usually vertical, on the left of the graph.
Manipulated variables are also known as independent variables. These are the variable which you change in an investigation. Plotted on the x axis.
well a independent variable is usually the one that is manipulated and is the x axis while the dependent is the one that depends on the independent and is the responding variable and the x-axis!A little saying i use is dry mix/dependent,responding,y axis/manipulated variable,independent,x axis.tale the first letter of all of that and you get dry mix.
The independent variable is the one which the researcher controls and manipulates. On a graph this is the 'x' axis.