Example of an Experiment ignored; within four minutes the room contained enough smoke to interfere with vision and breathing. Latane and Darley were primarily interested in knowing how frequently students simply got up and left the room to report the emergency. Most ( per cent) of the students who were waiting alone reported the smoke, but those reporting in groups were far less. Groups consisting of three naïve students reported it only per cent of the time. When the students waited with two other confederates, who were instructed before hand by the researchers to do nothing, only per cent students reported smoke. which varies, that is, it takes on different values (or changes) and can be measured is a variable . An object by itself is not a variable. But its attributes are. For example, the pen that you use for writing is NOT a variable. But there are varieties of pens available in different shapes, sizes, and colour. All of these are variables. The room in which you are sitting is NOT a variable but its size is as there are rooms of different sizes. The height of the individuals ( ' to ') is another variable. Similarly, people of different races have different colours. Young people have started dyeing their hair in different colours. Thus, colour of hair becomes a variable. Intelligence is a variable (there are people with varying levels of intelligence — high, moderate, low). The presence or absence of persons in the room is a variable as shown in the experiment in Box . . Thus, the variation can be in the quality or quantity of objects/events. Variables are of many types. We will however focus on independent and dependent variables. Independent variable is that variable which is manipulated or altered or its strength varied by the researcher in the experiment. It is the effect of this change in the variable which the researcher wants to observe or note in the study. In the experiment conducted by Latane and Darley (Box . ), the researchers wanted to examine the effect of the presence of other
📖 generic · CBSE Class 11 English medium · PSYCOLOGY · Page 8example
Example of an Experiment
Chapter 2: Methods of Enquiry in Psychology · PSYCOLOGY
Example
Related topics
Have a question about this topic?
Get an AI answer grounded in your actual textbook — with the exact page reference.
Ask AI about this topic →