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Comparative Psychologist

Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Decision Making -- Solution

You conduct a more expensive experiment with three phases.

This is the real-life decision comparative psychologist Cathy Rankin would make in a similar situation. "You have to design the best experiment for the least amount of cost," she says.

"But you can't cut too many corners and make your work worthless," she says. In this experiment, you have two variables you are trying to study: room temperature and time of day. If you combine the two variables in one phase, you won't know which variable affected the rats' appetite.

"You have to make sure you separate the variables so you can examine the results," says Rankin.


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