<span>This is a false statement. It would be very difficult to prove everything as this would take a lot of research and funding. I don’t believe that there are enough scientists or money for everything to be proven and there to be concrete evidence that we have no free will.</span>
Answer:
all of the above. all of these are publicly funded services paid by tax dollars so all are county services
I believe the answer is C. <span>open-ended
</span><span>open-ended refers to the type of question that being done in order to ecnourage/ignite answers with deep meaning (emotional response)
While other type of questions could be done in a yes or no format, open-ended questions could only be done in essay format.</span>
Answer:
Cognitive maps
Explanation:
n E. C. Tolman's experiment, some rats were trained to run through mazes for standard food goals, while other rats were allowed to explore the mazes for 10 days without food goals or other rewards. Later, when food rewards were placed in a box at the far end of the maze, the previously unrewarded rats reached the food box as quickly as the rewarded rats after only one or two trials. This experiment demonstrated that the rats had the ability to form cognitive maps of their surroundings.
Cognitive map is any visual representation of a person's mental model for a given process or concept i.e the mental image of the attributes of our environment. This maps help an individual to acquire, code, store, recall and decode information about the relative locations and attributes in their spatial environment.
Cognitive maps help us lay out ideas, processes, and recognize the pattern and relationship.
In E. C. Tolman's experiment, the rat use cognitive maps to find where rewards in the box are located because the rats are able to create and use cognitive maps to help them navigate their environment