A because it helps the immune system
Doing your favorite thing
like playing in phone
lol
1) This type of conditioning is called classical conditioning. We learned that Jenny is always associating her room as a very cold environment. Because of this, she starts to <em>anticipate</em> this coldness that she even starts to shiver before she enters the room. Associating two events together is part of classical conditioning.
2) For this item, the type of conditioning shown is called operant conditioning. Operant conditioning is defined as having a change in behavior because of a reinforcement or a punishment. In this case, Jake is met with a punishment in the form of the ticket that's why his behavior changed.
3) This item is also an example of classical conditioning. Because you really disliked the sheep's brain, you started changing your behavior towards it that even something only <em>similar</em> to the brain makes you react unpleasantly. Here, you associated the brain (or the sight of something similar) to your very unpleasant experience in biology.
4) This one is another example of operant conditioning. Here, instead of being punished, you are offered a reinforcement in the form of a compliment. Because of this compliment, you decided to continue your haircut. Thus, the reinforcement successfully influenced your "behavior".
Answer: D. Both say our development is continuous and has milestones
Explanation:
Jean Piaget's theory of development focuses on cognitive development and has 4 stages: sensorimotor (0-2), preoperational (2-7), concrete operational (7-11), and formal operational (11+).
Erik Erikson's theory of development focuses on psychosocial development and has 8 stages: trust vs mistrust (0-18 mos), autonomy vs shame and doubt (18 mos - 3 yrs), initiative vs guilt (3-5), industry vs inferiority (5-13), identity vs confusion (13-21), intimacy vs isolation (21-39), generativity vs stagnation (40-65), and integrity vs despair (65+).
Both have specific age milestones for each stage, and they do not stop until death.
Answer:
something that must be accepted and cannot be changed, however unpalatable.