The answer to this item is unconscious mind. Although Freud was not responsible for the determination of conscious and unconscious, he for certain made it popular. According to him, unconscious mind is that which is not accessible by our conscious mind but affects the way a person thinks, acts, or behaves.
The correct answer is state-dependent memory
State-dependent memory refers to the phenomenon wherein people are able to efficiently retrieve memories if they are in the same psychological state as they were when the memory was first formed. An example of <span>state-dependent memory is recalling information readily during an exam because you are caffeinated during it, just like you were caffeinated when you studied and first formed memories of the information. </span>
Answer:
“Happy people expect more from their friends.”
Explanation:
This paragraph is a HOT mess, but from what I can assume, it’s that sentence because the rest of the paragraph talk about the benefits of happy workers
Abstract
The distribution of wealth in the world is manifested by the polarization of a rich North and a poor South. Is the North-South conflict increasing or decreasing, and does it depend on such variables as major power conflict, intra-Northern conflict, and world prosperity, as some schools of thought maintain? Focusing on these questions from a leadership-long cycle perspective suggests several hypotheses about the interrelationships between global economic growth, Northern antagonism, and North-South conflict. The effect of conflict on growth is also examined. Generating data on world economic growth and major power conflict, intra-Northern conflict, and North-South conflict for the period from 1870 to 1992, vector auto-regression analysis is used to test new hypotheses. Results provide considerable support for the new hypotheses, provide mixed support for the previous arguments, and show that the relationship between world economic growth and conflict is not the same before and after World War II.