I believe that the effect of training when your equipped with physiological variables is that it causes your body to not understand what the problems are within your body so therefore your body make tell you that your not tired or exausted or in pain when you're really in seriouse pain. This can cause lifelong injuries that'll be with you for the rest of your life. Hoped it helped I just guessed! : )
Victoria Garshnek has written: 'The effect of long-distance training on orthostatic efficiency in young adult females' -- subject(s): Blood pressure, Exercise, Heart beat, Physiological aspects, Physiological aspects of Exercise, Running, Training
Douglas A. Clausen has written: 'The combined effect of aerobic exercise and vitamin E upon cardiorespiratory endurance and measured blood variables' -- subject(s): Aerobic exercises, Physical fitness, Physiological aspects, Physiological aspects of Aerobic exercises, Physiological aspects of Vitamin E, Vitamin E
Michael R. Lawlor has written: 'Influence of chronic beta-adrenergic blockade on hemodynamic and metabolic responses to endurance training' -- subject(s): Adrenergic beta blockers, Exercise, Physiological aspects, Physiological aspects of Exercise, Physiological effect, Propranolol
Cause variables are factors that directly influence or produce an effect on another variable. Effect variables are outcomes or results that are influenced by the cause variables. Understanding the relationships between cause and effect variables helps to analyze and predict how changes in one variable impact another.
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'Known' Variables
Albert J. Peterson has written: 'The effect of aerobic and aerokinetic training on serum lipids and lipoproteins in college-aged women' -- subject(s): Aerobic exercises, Blood lipids, Exercise for women, Lipoproteins, Physiological aspects, Physiological aspects of Aerobic exercises, Physiological aspects of Exercise for women
Affect is a verb. Effect is what a cause does. Training is a cause, therefor the effect is losing weight. And you are affecting your health positively.
Endogenous variables are important in econometrics and economic modeling because they show whether a variable causes a particular effect. Economists employ causal modeling to explain outcomes (dependent variables) based on a variety of factors (independent variables), and to determine to which extent a result can be attributed to an endogenous or exogenous cause.
Ann L. Albright has written: 'The effect of aerobic training on the evolution of diabetic nephropathy in an animal model of Type I diabetes' -- subject(s): Aerobic exercises, Diabetic nephropathies, Exercise, Physiological aspects, Physiological aspects of Aerobic exercises, Rats
Sally Blank has written: 'Effect of isokinetic strength training on muscle fiber composition and fiber size in young men and women' -- subject(s): Exercise, Knee, Leg, Muscle, Muscle strength, Muscles, Physiological aspects, Physiological aspects of Exercise
If none of the variables are constant (or controls) you have no idea which variable or combination of variables caused the effect.