Short Answer

A psychology researcher conducts a 3×23 \times 2 factorial experiment examining the effects of a quantitative independent variable, 'Dosage of Drug' (with levels: 5mg, 10mg, 15mg), and a categorical independent variable, 'Patient Gender' (with levels: Male, Female). Applying standard psychology graphing conventions, state the type of graph that should be used and explain how these two independent variables must be represented on it.

Question: A psychology researcher conducts a 3×23 \times 2 factorial experiment examining the effects of a quantitative independent variable, 'Dosage of Drug' (with levels: 5mg, 10mg, 15mg), and a categorical independent variable, 'Patient Gender' (with levels: Male, Female). Applying standard psychology graphing conventions, state the type of graph that should be used and explain how these two independent variables must be represented on it.

Sample answer: To graph this 3×23 \times 2 factorial design, a line graph should be used. The quantitative independent variable, 'Dosage of Drug', must be placed on the xx-axis, and the categorical independent variable, 'Patient Gender', must be represented by distinct line formats.

Key points:

  • Selects a line graph as the correct graphical representation.
  • Applies the rule to place the quantitative variable ('Dosage of Drug') on the xx-axis.
  • Applies the rule to represent the categorical variable ('Patient Gender') with distinct line formats.

Rubric: The student must state that a line graph is the correct graph type. They must also correctly apply the graphing convention by placing the quantitative variable ('Dosage of Drug') on the xx-axis and the categorical variable ('Patient Gender') as distinct line formats.

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Updated 2026-05-27

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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU

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