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A student researcher is designing a field experiment to test the bystander effect. They plan to stage a scenario where a confederate drops a wallet. Apply the concept of the bystander effect to identify the independent variable (IV) and dependent variable (DV) the researcher must manipulate and measure in this study.

Question: A student researcher is designing a field experiment to test the bystander effect. They plan to stage a scenario where a confederate drops a wallet. Apply the concept of the bystander effect to identify the independent variable (IV) and dependent variable (DV) the researcher must manipulate and measure in this study.

Sample answer: In this experiment, the independent variable (IV) is the number of witnesses present during the incident (which the researcher manipulates, for example, 11 vs. 55 bystanders). The dependent variable (DV) is whether a single bystander attempts to assist the victim (measured as helping behavior, such as returning the wallet).

Key points:

  • Identify the independent variable as the number of witnesses/bystanders present.
  • Identify the dependent variable as the helping behavior or likelihood of assistance from a single individual.
  • Apply these variables specifically to the staged wallet-dropping scenario.

Rubric: Award full credit if the student correctly identifies the independent variable as the number of witnesses/bystanders and the dependent variable as the likelihood or occurrence of individual assistance.

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Updated 2026-05-26

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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU

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