Variables & Types
Variables & Types
Here early marriage is the variable. A business researcher may find it useful to include the
dividend in determining the share prices. Here dividend is the variable.
Effectiveness, divorce and share prices are also variables because they also
vary as a result of manipulating fertilizers, early marriage, and dividends.
Types of Variable
1. Qualitative Variables.
2. Quantitative Variables.
3. Discrete Variable.
4. Continuous Variable.
5. Dependent Variables.
6. Independent Variables.
7. Background Variable.
8. Moderating Variable.
9. Extraneous Variable.
10. Intervening Variable.
11. Suppressor Variable.
Qualitative Variables
An important distinction between variables is between the qualitative variable
and the quantitative variable.
The value of the variable ‘religion’ (Muslim, Hindu, ..,etc.) differs qualitatively;
no ordering of religion is implied. Qualitative variables are sometimes referred
to as categorical variables.
For example, the variable sex has two distinct categories: ‘male’ and ‘female.’
Since the values of this variable are expressed in categories, we refer to this as
a categorical variable.
Similarly, place of residence may be categorized as being urban and rural and
thus is a categorical variable.
Ordinal variables are those which can be logically ordered or ranked higher or
lower than another but do not necessarily establish a numeric difference
between each category, such as examination grades (A+, A, B+, etc., clothing
size (Extra large, large, medium, small).
Nominal variables are those who can neither be ranked nor logically ordered,
such as religion, sex, etc.
Quantitative Variables
The age can take on different values because a person can be 20 years old, 35
years old, and so on. Likewise, family size is a quantitative variable, because a
family might be comprised of one, two, three members, and so on.
A quantitative variable is one for which the resulting observations are numeric
and thus possesses a natural ordering or ranking.
Discrete and Continuous Variables
For example, a household could have three or five children, but not 4.52
children.
Other variables, such as ‘time required to complete an MCQ test’ and ‘waiting
time in a queue in front of a bank counter,’ are examples of a continuous
variable.
The time required in the above examples is a continuous variable, which could
be, for example, 1.65 minutes, or it could be 1.6584795214 minutes.
Discrete Variable
A discrete variable, restricted to certain values, usually (but not necessarily)
consists of whole numbers, such as the family size, number of defective items
in a box. They are often the results of enumeration or counting.
Continuous Variable
In each of the above queries, we have two variables: one independent and one
dependent. In the first example, ‘low intake of food’ is believed to have caused
the ‘problem of underweight.’ It is thus the so-called independent variable.
Underweight is the dependent variable because we believe that this ‘problem’
(the problem of underweight) has been caused by ‘the low intake of food’ (the
factor).
Independent Variable
The variable that is used to describe or measure the factor that is assumed to
cause or at least to influence the problem or outcome is called
an independent variable.
The definition implies that the experimenter uses the independent variable to
describe or explain the influence or effect of it on the dependent variable.
Dependent Variable
In a causal relationship, the cause is the independent variable, and the effect is
the dependent variable. If we hypothesize that smoking causes lung cancer,
‘smoking’ is the independent variable and cancer the dependent variable.
Background Variable
In almost every study, we collect information such as age, sex, educational
attainment, socioeconomic status, marital status, religion, place of birth, and
the like. These variables are referred to as background variables.
These variables are often related to many independent variables so that they
influence the problem indirectly. Hence they are called background variables.
Moderating Variable
In any statement of relationships of variables, it is normally hypothesized that
in some way, the independent variable ’causes’ the dependent variable to
occur. In simple relationships, all other variables are extraneous and are
ignored. In actual study situations, such a simple one-to-one relationship
needs to be revised to take other variables into account to better explain the
relationship. This emphasizes the need to consider a second independent
variable that is expected to have a significant contributory or contingent effect
on the originally stated dependent-independent relationship. Such a variable
is termed a moderating variable.
If you are focusing on the relationship between the age of the trainees and
work performance, you might use ‘type of training’ as a moderating variable.
Extraneous Variable
Most studies concern the identification of a single independent variable and
the measurement of its effect on the dependent variable.
But still, several variables might conceivably affect our hypothesized
independent-dependent variable relationship, thereby distorting the study.
These variables are referred to as extraneous variables.
Extraneous variables are not necessarily part of the study. They exert a
confounding effect on the dependent-independent relationship and thus need
to be eliminated or controlled for.
For this purpose, one can construct two crosstables: one for illiterate mothers
and the other for literate mothers. If we find a similar association between
work status and duration of breastfeeding in both the groups of mothers, then
we conclude that the educational level of mothers is not a confounding
variable.
Intervening Variable
Often an apparent relationship between two variables is caused by a third
variable. For example, variables X and Y may be highly correlated, but only
because X causes the third variable, Z, which in turn causes Y. In this case, Z is
the intervening variable.
Thus, motive, job satisfaction, responsibility, behavior, justice are some of the
examples of intervening variables.
Suppressor Variable
In many cases, we have good reasons to believe that the variables of interest
have a relationship within themselves, but our data fail to establish any such
relationship. Some hidden factors may be suppressing the true relationship
between the two original variables.
Thus, for example, low age may pull education up but income down. In
contrast, a high age may pull income up but education down, effectively
canceling out the relationship between education and income unless age is
controlled for.