Asked by 1
Labels and legends on a chart should indicate
1. the name and title of the researcher who compiled the data.
2. what is being measured.
3. the name of the organization that sponsored the research.
4. what units of measurement are depicted.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Correct: 2 and 4.
- A legend/axis labels should say what is being measured (the variable) and the units (e.g., "Temperature (°C)").
- The researcher's name/title and sponsoring organization are not typically part of the legend; include them as a caption, source line, or footnote (or in the figure caption/metadata) if attribution is required.
- A legend/axis labels should say what is being measured (the variable) and the units (e.g., "Temperature (°C)").
- The researcher's name/title and sponsoring organization are not typically part of the legend; include them as a caption, source line, or footnote (or in the figure caption/metadata) if attribution is required.
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