Answer:
<u>Grief Work</u>
Explanation:
Grief Work is a psychological concept, involving cognitive process of over coming through loss of death of any closely associated person. It denotes cognitive work on the events before & during the death time, attempting to focus on working for detachment from decreased.
Ellen's wife death & his guilts of not spending time with her, he managing the housework done by him, his volunteer efforts with friends at shelter house : all denote his efforts of overcoming over his wife's death & detaching himself for her memories. So, these experiences are an example of Grief Work
No
But <span>the </span>EU<span> adopted negotiating directives for a bilateral </span>EU Cuba <span>Political Dialogue and Cooperation Agreement.</span>
The land was controlled by both the United States and the Great Britain. This was an ongoing dispute until the Treaty of 1846, where a boundary was set in order to provide even control on the lands in the Oregon territory.
The correct answer is: "semantic encoding".
In general, encoding techniques are applied in order to elaborate on the information perceived by our senses, seeking to appropiately store it in our longer lasting memory units and to optimize subsequent retrieval.
Semantic encoding consists on relating certain concepts to a context in order to remember them better afterwards, using mechanisms such as chunking or mnemonics. This is the case in the research described where, in order to remember a list of objects, participants connect them to a house context.