In an experiment, a variable is any factor that could change or be changed
There are different types of variables within an experiment
The independent variable: the only variable that should be changed throughout an experiment
The controlled/confounding variables: any other variables that may affect the results of the experiment that need to be controlled or monitored
The dependent variable: the variable that is measured to determine the outcome of an experiment (the results)
It is essential that any variable that may affect the outcome of an experiment is controlled in order for the results to be valid
Preliminary research and preliminary studies can be used to identify variables within an experiment and to determine ways of controlling these variables effectively
The science surrounding the issue/problem being investigated is likely to contain information about different factors or variables that may exist
Example of the science surrounding enzyme rate experiments
Enzyme rate experiments are experiments that are carried out to determine the effect of changing a particular factor on the rate of a reaction that is catalysed by an enzyme
Factors that can be changed include:
Temperature
pH
Enzyme concentration
Substrate concentration
The key thing with enzyme rate experiments is to ensure that only one of these variables is changed during a particular experiment
This is known as the independent variable
All other variables must be controlled (they must stay the same)
These are known as the control variables
For example, if investigating the effect of temperature on the rate of reaction, the pH, enzyme concentration and substrate concentration must be exactly the same (kept constant) each time you run the experiment (at each different temperature you are investigating)
If these control variables are not kept constant, they could affect the results of the experiment