- A variable that is deliberately manipulated by the researcher.
- A variable that is measured as the outcome.
- An unmeasured variable that affects both the independent and dependent variables, potentially distorting the true relationship.
- A variable that is held constant.
No category found.
- Phenomenology
- Ethnography
- Grounded Theory
- Narrative Inquiry
- Relying on anecdotal evidence
- Implementing intuition
- Adhering to tradition
- Practicing evidence-based medicine
- To allow researchers to manipulate variables freely.
- To minimize the influence of extraneous variables and isolate the effect of the independent variable.
- To ensure participant satisfaction.
- To speed up the research process.
- Validity
- Reliability
- Responsiveness
- Sensitivity
- Statistical power
- Data saturation
- Anonymity and confidentiality
- Random assignment
- Narrative Review
- Scoping Review
- Meta-analysis
- Integrative Review
- Theory generation
- Hypothesis testing
- Policy development
- Clinical expertise
- The extent to which the independent variable caused the observed effect.
- The generalizability of the findings to other populations and settings.
- The consistency of the measurement tool.
- The accuracy of the statistical analysis.
- To make data analysis easier.
- To ensure that every member of the population has an equal chance of being selected, promoting representativeness.
- To select only healthy participants.
- To reduce the cost of research.
- Intuitive knowledge
- Tradition-based practice
- Evidence-based practice
- Personal experience
- The sample size.
- The magnitude of the difference or relationship between variables.
- The p-value.
- The statistical power of the study.
- Phenomenology
- Grounded Theory
- Ethnography
- Case Study
- The average value.
- The middle value.
- The most frequently occurring value.
- The difference between the highest and lowest values.
- The right of participants to be protected from harm.
- The right of participants to make their own informed decisions about participation.
- The fair distribution of research benefits and burdens.
- The obligation to maximize benefits for participants.
- Introduction
- Literature Review
- Methodology
- Results
- Parental permission for research participation.
- The child's formal agreement to participate, beyond just parental consent.
- The child's ability to understand complex medical terms.
- The child's refusal to participate.
- It enhances generalizability.
- It has no impact on generalizability.
- It limits the generalizability of the findings.
- It only affects the internal validity.
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