The answer is a dependent variable. A variable that changes in response to another variable is called a dependent variable.
The dependent variable.
An independent variable is a variable which, in the context of the experiment or the observations, can affect the dependent variable but is not affected by it. By contrast, the dependent variable is affected by changes in the independent variable. It is quite possible that there is no independent variable, as such, and each variable affects the other.
Any form of numerical measurement can be a dependent variable (or an independent one).
The dependent variable has an inverse linear relationship with the dependent variable. When the dependent increases, the independent decreases, and conversely.
.... then your graph is inverted.
The dependent variable is dependent on the independent variable, so when the independent variable changes, so does the dependent variable.
dependent variable
is dependent on the independent variable
Yes, the dependent variable is the variable which is measured.
Oh honey, the independent variable is the one you can control and manipulate, like a puppet master pulling the strings. The dependent variable is the one that sits back and gets affected by the independent variable's shenanigans, like a poor unsuspecting victim. So, in simpler terms, the independent variable is the cause, and the dependent variable is the effect.
The dependent variable is the outcome or response that is being measured in an experiment. It is what is affected by changes in the independent variable, which is the variable being manipulated. The dependent variable is dependent on the independent variable.
The independent variable is the variable that is altered by the scientist, and the dependent variable's value is dependent on the value of the independent variable.
Technically you can't control the dependent variable. However, by controlling and monitoring the Independent variable, (the variable which determines the dependent variable) you could lead the dependent variable to produce favourable results.
yes
Yes, criterion variable is the same as a dependent variable.
The dependent variable is the one that changes.