The experiment's independent variable is the jelly bean flavor, the dependent variable is the consumption amount, outliers are unusually high or low consumption, and taste aversion learning may impact preferences.
In the described experiment, the independent variable is the type of jelly bean flavor (traditional or exotic) provided to the participants. The dependent variable is the number of jelly beans consumed by each participant. Outliers in this context would refer to any participants whose consumption patterns drastically differ from the rest of the group, which might skew the results. Finally, taste aversion learning could occur if participants learned to associate the exotic flavors (like rubber eraser or cough medicine) with negative experiences, potentially affecting their later consumption of traditional flavors.
The complete uqestion is- A research consultant in a candy factory is developing exotic tasting jelly beans. He hypothesized that experiencing exotic flavors would increase liking for traditional candy flavors. First, he had participants come into the lab, one at a time, and allowed them to eat as many jelly beans as they wanted from a dish of 50 on the table. The flavors in the dish were cherry, tangerine, chocolate, lemon, and cotton candy. The next time they came into the lab, he mixed in new flavors that looked similar to the old ones but had unique flavors: rubber eraser, cough medicine, dirt, salt, pencil shavings. Finally, the same participants were brought in to the lab again to repeat the procedure from Time 1. The researcher kept track of how many jelly beans were consumed by each participant at each time, as shown in the table.
Part A: Apply each of the following concepts to the researcher’s experiment. Independent variable
Dependent variable
Outliers Taste
aversion learning