Introduction:
A suppressor variable is one that conceals a relationship between other variables. For example, when studying the opioid crisis, a researcher might find increased prescriptions for pain management are related to patients gaining access to possible treatment information. A suppressor variable here could be the aggressive sales tactics of drug sales representatives. A distorter variable reverses the direction of a relationship between other variables. For example, one may argue that the corrections system is not biased, since more White people are in prison than Black people. A distorter variable reveals that Black men are disproportionately imprisoned more often than White people.
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Chapter 15 Solutions
The Practice of Social Research (MindTap Course List)
- Social Psychology (10th Edition)SociologyISBN:9780134641287Author:Elliot Aronson, Timothy D. Wilson, Robin M. Akert, Samuel R. SommersPublisher:Pearson College DivIntroduction to Sociology (Eleventh Edition)SociologyISBN:9780393639407Author:Deborah Carr, Anthony Giddens, Mitchell Duneier, Richard P. AppelbaumPublisher:W. W. Norton & CompanyThe Basics of Social Research (MindTap Course Lis...SociologyISBN:9781305503076Author:Earl R. BabbiePublisher:Cengage Learning
- Criminalistics: An Introduction to Forensic Scien...SociologyISBN:9780134477596Author:Saferstein, RichardPublisher:PEARSONSociology: A Down-to-Earth Approach (13th Edition)SociologyISBN:9780134205571Author:James M. HenslinPublisher:PEARSONSociety: The Basics (14th Edition)SociologyISBN:9780134206325Author:John J. MacionisPublisher:PEARSON