Common Types of Variables
Common Types of Variables
For example; 'income' is a variable that can vary between data units in a
population (i.e. the people or businesses being studied may not have
the same incomes) and can also vary over time for each data unit (i.e.
income can go up or down).
1. Categorical variable: variables than can be put into categories. For example, the
category Toothpaste Brands might contain the variables Colgate and Aquafresh.
2. Confounding variable: extra variables that have a hidden effect on your experimental
results.
3. Continuous variable: a variable with infinite number of values, like time or weight.
4. Control variable: a factor in an experiment which must be held constant. For example,
in an experiment to determine whether light makes plants grow faster, you would have to
6. Discrete variable: a variable that can only take on a certain number of values. For
example, number of cars in a parking lot is discrete because a car park can only hold so
many cars.
7. Independent variable: a variable that is not affected by anything that you, the
10. Ordinal variable: similar to a categorical variable, but there is a clear order. For
example, income levels of low, middle, and high could be considered ordinal.
11. Qualitative variable: a broad category for any variable that cant be counted (i.e. has no
numerical value). Nominal and ordinal variables fall under this umbrella term.
12. Quantitative variable: A broad category that includes any variable that can be counted,
or has a numerical value associated with it. Examples of variables that fall into this
13. Ratio variables: similar to interval variables, but has a meaningful zero.
1. Binary variable: a variable that can only take on two values, usually 0/1. Could also be
2. Collider Variable: a variable represented by a node on a causal graph that has paths
4. Criterion variable: another name for a dependent variable, when the variable is used in
non-experimental situations.
5. Dichotomous variable: Another name for a binary variable.
6. Dummy Variables: used in regression analysis when you want to assign relationships to
unconnected categorical variables. For example, if you had the categories has dogs and
owns a car you might assign a 1 to mean has dogs and 0 to mean owns a car.
11. Interval variable: a meaningful measurement between two variables. Also sometimes
12. Intervening variable: a variable that is used to explain the relationship between
variables.
13. Latent Variable: a hidden variable that cant be measured or observed directly.
16. Mediating variable: variables that explain how the relationship between variables
happens. For example, it could explain the difference between the predictor and criterion.
17. Moderating variable: changes the strength of an effect between independent and
dependent variables. For example, psychotherapy may reduce stress levels for women
more than men, so sex moderates the effect between psychotherapy and stress levels.
20. Outcome variable: similar in meaning to a dependent variable, but used in a non-
experimental study.
21. Polychotomous variables: variables that can have more than two values.
22. Predictor variable: similar in meaning to the independent variable, but used in
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