80 is neither dependent nor independent. It is a number: a variable can be dependent or independent, not a constant.
No. If you are studying waiting time, for example at a bank, the waiting time could be the dependent variable with the number of open windows as the independent variable.
yes. usually you will work with an equal amount of dependent and independent variables. (ie, one dependent variable for every independent variable, and such that there is some kind of relationship between each..) If only. Usually a variable depends on many other variables. Such as, the price of a house depends on its size, number of rooms, distance to schools, age, windows etc.
It depends on what you are doing with the cheese. For example, if you were studying the effects of different temperatures of a specific cheese, cheese would be the dependent variable. Or, if you were studying the number of mice attracted to different amounts of cheese, cheese would be the independent variable.
Independent variable could be the number (or spacing or size) of the laces and the dependant variable is distance. Possibly levels of the independent variable could be ranges of number of laces.
Independent variable: number of completed passes Dependent variable: number of touchdowns scored
80 is neither dependent nor independent. It is a number: a variable can be dependent or independent, not a constant.
Independent variable: Number of confederates providing the wrong answer Dependent variable: Level of conformity
The independent variable is the number of tickets purchased and the dependent variable is the amount of money spent.
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Independent variables answer the question "What do I change?"Dependent variables answer the question "What do I observe?"Controlled variables answer the question "What do I keep the same?"
No. If you are studying waiting time, for example at a bank, the waiting time could be the dependent variable with the number of open windows as the independent variable.
yes. usually you will work with an equal amount of dependent and independent variables. (ie, one dependent variable for every independent variable, and such that there is some kind of relationship between each..) If only. Usually a variable depends on many other variables. Such as, the price of a house depends on its size, number of rooms, distance to schools, age, windows etc.
In Jenness' experiment on conformity, the independent variable is the presence of others giving estimates of the number of beans in a bottle, while the dependent variable is the change in individual estimates after hearing others' estimates. The independent variable (presence of others) is manipulated to see its effect on the dependent variable (individual estimates).
it is anything you can experiment on in you project The variable in the experiment allow you to test alternate possible situations and solutions to confirm the validity if the experiment or to disprove it.
It depends on what you are doing with the cheese. For example, if you were studying the effects of different temperatures of a specific cheese, cheese would be the dependent variable. Or, if you were studying the number of mice attracted to different amounts of cheese, cheese would be the independent variable.
Independent variable: the number of cells in the circuit. Dependent variable: the current measured by the ammeter. Control variable: resistance of the resistor, type of light bulb.