I am working towards completing my undergrad honours thesis and I am in the process of analyzing and writing up my discussion section that is dealing with some form of multiple regression (can't figure out which it is based on my data and what my professor is looking for - In our meetings she can never articulate what I am looking for properly so I just agree and find my answers elsewhere). I have done stats in the past (Worked in SPSS), had no problem in the class with regression, but we only dealt with regression relationships that had 1 dependent and 1 independent variable (y = a + bX). In my analysis I am running 5 different models, with the first model having 1 dependent, and 2 independent, the next has 1 dependent and 3 independent, etc.
The Issue: In the final coefficient table in SPSS after running a regression analyses, I am having troubles understanding how/ why/ the meaning of the values changing. Please correct me if I am wrong, but when you run a regression analyses with multiple independent variables and 1 dependent variable, your answer will look something like this: Lets say for this example there are 2 Independent variables, variable 1 is significant, and variable 2 is not significant: "Variable1 has an impact on the dependent variable while controlling for variable 2. Variable 2 has no impact on the dependent variable while controlling for variable 1"
I am somewhat certain this statement is correct although rather limited in its meaning in the data. At this point that is ok as I can get assistance making this statement stronger within the thesis. My question then is as follows: What is meant by 'controlling for variable 1/ 2'? When we say controlling for, what is actually going on? How is the data actually controlling for it? The way I'd understand it is from a simple equation like this:
Constant (B = 5), Variable 1 (B = 10, Sig. = 0.04), Variable 2 (B = 15, Sig. = 0.98)
y = 5 + 10(x) + 5 + 15(x). From here, if we were examining variable 1 controlling for variable 2, I am thinking the equation would then turn into: y = 5 + 10(x) + 5 + 15(0) so we'd be left with y = 5 + 10(x) + 15?
Sorry to make this post extremely long but thank you for you in advance for any assistance in the matter.
TLDR: What does 'controlling for' mean in a hierarchical or standard or multivariate regression analysis? Please explain in the simplest terms as I am not a stats major nor will I understand complex responses.
Thanks again,
Michael