Statement C is wrong because extraneous variables are not simply irrelevant; they may influence the dependent variable and therefore often need to be controlled or accounted for in the design or analysis. Statements A, B, D and E are correct: the independent variable is manipulated or selected, the dependent variable is the measured outcome, control variables are held constant, and moderator variables can change the strength or direction of relationships. Hence, C alone is the incorrect statement and must be isolated as such.
Option A:
Option A is incorrect because it groups A, B and D as wrong, even though these three statements correctly define independent, dependent and control variables. Treating them as wrong would overturn standard terminology used in research methodology.
Option B:
Option B is correct because it identifies C alone as the wrong statement and implicitly accepts that A, B, D and E accurately describe the different roles variables can play. It highlights that extraneous variables require attention rather than dismissal.
Option C:
Option C is wrong because it combines C with D and thereby mislabels D as incorrect. Statement D rightly explains that a control variable is intentionally held constant to remove its influence on the dependent variable.
Option D:
Option D is also incorrect since it pairs C with E, wrongly suggesting that moderator variables cannot influence the relationship between independent and dependent variables. Statement E is actually a correct description of moderator variables.
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