Quick Scoop

A response variable in statistics is the main outcome you measure or observe in a study. It is the variable that may change in response to another variable, often called the explanatory or independent variable.

Simple Example

If you are studying whether study time affects test scores , then:

  • Study time = explanatory variable.
  • Test score = response variable.

In Plain Language

Think of the response variable as the result you care about. In graphs and regression, it is often the y-variable or dependent variable.

Why It Matters

Identifying the response variable helps you:

  • See what outcome you are trying to explain or predict.
  • Build statistical models correctly.
  • Interpret results without mixing up cause and effect.

In one sentence: the response variable is the thing you measure to see how it changes when something else changes.

If you want, I can also give you a 1-line definition , a real-life example , or a graph example.