Answer:
I believe it's C. melodrama....
Explanation:
The blues can be monozygotic (identical), which means they develop from one egg, which splits and two embryos are formed. They can also be dizygotic (fraternal), which means that each of the two twins develops from a separate ovum, which is fertilized by its own sperm cell. The explanation for the formation of dizygotic twins lies in the fact of the mother's hyperovulation, which is the release of more than one egg during ovulation. This fact again depends on the mother's genetics.
As the national center on the psychology of terrorism was founded to research the psychological aspects of terrorism, this is an example of how <u>current events</u> affect theories and perspectives in psychology.
<h3>What is the
psychology of terrorism?</h3>
This is one of the special issue of American Psychologist who presents a series of articles that showcase new conceptual, theoretical, and empirical advances in our understanding of the terrorism perspectives
The social psychology focus on person-situation interactions and the implications for who becomes a terrorist. For example, someone posits a "staircase model" of terrorism in which terrorism is viewed as sequential progress from lower floors to higher floors that occurs on a progressively narrowing staircase.
Read more about terrorism psychology
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The answer is B. Literacy rates are increasing in the region, and the gap between men and women is decreasing. Annual regional-level literacy estimates based on national data and the Unesco Institute for Statistics projections from 1990 to 2016 tell us that Eastern and South-Eastern Asia, Southern Asia, and Northern Africa and Western Asia have made the greatest progress in improving adult literacy over the past 26 years .
According to the Fact Sheet No. 45 dated September 2017 of the Unesco Institute for Statistics, Northern Africa and Western Asia literacy rate went from 64% to 81. The youth literacy rate increased in Northern Africa and Western Asia from 80% to 90% and sub-Saharan Africa from 65% to 75%. Female literacy rates-lower than male literacy rates at the start of the period - generally grew faster than male literacy rates between 1990 and 2016.Thus, the gap between men and women has decreased in all regions over the past 26 years.