Answer:
The likelihood of her remembering an actual event is very slim
Explanation:
Due to the fact that Tom recalls the incident his 8 year old daughter is trying to relay to him happened in a cartoon, it is unlikely it happened for real.
The 8 year old is telling her father Tom, that her toy was ran over by a car in an event that happened years ago. Her father remembers that was a scene from a cartoon so it is very likely that what the 8 year old thinks was a real event was in fact her recalling the cartoon and interpreting that it happened to her.
An 8 year old's brain isn't fully developed to differentiate reality and fantasy and as such, such occurrences are not rare.
I believe it is All of them however as you cannot pick all the only option that wouod be sustained is d
First of all, it's not exactly clear what is "normal" - this changes from generation to generation and for example the traditional family used to be considered "normal" but now all other kinds of families are normal too.
Second, there is typically a big generational difference between family members, so it's hard to say that they function "as a whole"
For these reasons I don't think this statement is true.
C. The gate-control theory. The gate control theory of pain states that non-painful inputs closes the nerve gates to painful input, which prevents pain sensation from traveling to the central nervous system.