-- A moderator variable is a variable that modifies the relationship between the independent and dependent variable. Let's think of the above example. We can draw a picture of how the variables work as below.
Figure 1.
_____________ _____________
| | | |
| The status | | Aggressive |
| of the | ------------------> | Response |
| frustrator | | |
|_____________| |_____________|
(independent) (dependent)
Now, the researcher wanted to tweak the situation and see how male and female responded differently. The variable, gender, changes (moderates) the major relationship between the independent and dependent variable. So the picture is as follows.
Figure 2.
_____________ _____________
| | | |
| The status | | Aggressive |
| of the | ------------------> | Response |
| frustrator | | | |
|_____________| / |_____________|
(independent) / (dependent)
______|______
| |
| Gender |
|_____________|
(moderator)
In fact, this is how the researcher's study was done. He said, "In both conditions, men tended to honk faster than women." The picture identifies each variable and the relationships among them. The independent variable (the status of the frustrator) affects dependent variable (aggressive response) and the effect on dependent variable will be changed according to the attributes (male and female) of the moderator variable (gender).
But, some of you may think that the independent variable is "frustration," not "the status of frustrator." It is also a valid (even correct) answer, if we look at the research problem at a different angle. Do you know the phrase, "theory should be parsimonious"? In short, parsimony means that the shorter (or simpler) one is better, if two theories explain the same thing. This principle has an advantage. If the theoretical statement is true and simple, it may be used in a different study as a (axiomatic) basis. So, we may assume (I do not know if the study was designed this way, though because the author did not mention this) that there is a simple axiomatic (law-like) assumption of which diagram looks like the below.
Figure 3.
_____________ _____________
| | | |
| Frustration | ------------------> | Aggressive |
| | | response |
|_____________| |_____________|
(independent) (dependent)
This is very simple and plausible. Suppose that this is a valid result of a study so that the researcher implicitly used this model in his study. What he did, then, is that he made another variable to see if it influences the dependent variable (Aggressive response). The variable is "status." The variable changes (moderates) the relationship between the independent and dependent variable. Guess what it is called! -- moderator (intervening) variable! In this case, the independent variable (frustration) is held in constant (it is controlled! So, it becomes the control variable, too!) So the picture describing the study should look as follow.
Please note that both control and moderator variables are considered as independent variables. It is up to the researchers to determine which are the independent, moderator, and control variable (Sproull, 1995). In the below picture, we can simply think that the variable, frustration, can be out of the picture because it is held in constant. In other words, there is only one attribute in the frustration variable -- blocking a car. This condition is going to be held constant no matter what in this study. As a result, if we omit the frustration variable, the picture will be the same as we saw in the figure 1. And if it is the case, the moderate variable here (status of the frustrator) becomes the independent variable.
Figure 4.
_____________ _____________
| | | |
| Frustration | ------------------> | Aggressive |
| | | | response |
|_____________| | |_____________|
(independent) ______|______ (dependent)
(control) | |
| Status of |
| frustrator |
|_____________|
(Moderator)
The same things can happen with gender variable. I told that gender is a moderating (intervening) variable in Figure 2. Then, what if the researcher wants to hold the independent variable constant (no status difference). Then he is controlling the status variable, use the gender variable as an independent variable.
You shouldn't be confused. As a researcher, the dependent and independent variable should be clarified. Then, he or she can add a moderating variable to see how the relation between the original independent and dependent variable change. If the researcher wants to control either independent or moderating variable, the controlled variable becomes an control variable.
For tests... You should be aware of (1) that the independent variable does something to the dependent variable; (2) the independent variable does happens earlier than the dependent variable. So, in the statement (hypothesis) man are stronger than women, you should be able to figure out that the statement implicitly suggests: (1) that being a man may have caused more strength; (2) that gender (being a man) happened earlier than having more strength.
<Reference>
Sproull, N.. (1995). Handbook of research methods : a guide for practitioners and students in the social sciences, (2nd ed). Metuchen, NJ: Scarecrow Press.
Questions, Comments? -- please leave them in the class forum.
Modified: