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#1. A busy parent is trying to determine the optimal cooking time for their oatmeal in the microwave to achieve the desired consistency. Each morning, they use the same brand of oatmeal and the same microwave, but they systematically vary the duration for which the oatmeal is heated (e.g., 60 seconds, 90 seconds, 120 seconds). After each trial, they evaluate the oatmeal’s consistency. This systematic investigation aims to identify the perfect amount of time for a single intervention (microwave heating). What type of analysis is the parent conducting?
The parent is conducting a parametric analysis A parametric analysis involves systematically varying the level amount or magnitude of a single independent variable intervention to determine the most effective or optimal value for that variable In this scenario the intervention is microwave heating and the amount being varied is the duration time The parent is trying to find the optimal parameter for the microwave heating A comparative analysis involves comparing the effects of two or more different interventions or treatments to determine which is most effective A component analysis is used when an intervention consists of multiple components and the goal is to determine which individual components or combination of components are essential for the interventions effectiveness Confounding analysis is not a type of experimental analysis rather a confound is an uncontrolled variable that systematically covaries with the independent variable making it difficult to determine which variable is responsible for changes in the dependent variable
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