<span>When responding decreases with the elimination of reinforcing consequences, this is known as the extinction process in operant conditioning.
</span><span>Operant conditioning is a theory of learning that focuses on changes in an individual’s observable behaviors, and e</span><span>xtinction is when a reinforced behavior is extinguished entirely.
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They heard animals and make clothes and jewelery and trade with the people close to them
Answer:
Explanation:
When the Aztec conquered a rival city-state (referred to as an altepetl) they would force the conquered people to accept the Aztec gods, but the Aztec also allowed them to keep their own original gods.
Answer:
c. hippocampus
Explanation:
The options for this question are missing. The options are:
a. amygdala
b. hypothalamus
c. hippocampus
d. cerebellum
In neurology, the part of our brain that is in charge of transforming short-term memories into long-term memories is the hippocampus. When a person has damage in the hippocampus, the person can experience a loss of the ability to make new memories (because the process of transforming short-term memories into long-term ones is affected) and they can also have loss of memory.
In this example, Mateo had a stroke and now he is unable to remember the directions that enable him to get to and return from his new doctor's office. We can tell that<u> Mateo goes to the doctor usually and it's a fixed route, however he is experiencing a damage that is affecting the process of transforming short-term memories into long-term ones and thus, he keeps forgetting the route to his doctor's office.</u> Therefore, the brain structure that was potentially damaged (since it's the one in charge of this process) is the hippocampus.
The conflict at hand is a State law versus a Federal law (National rights vs. state rights)
The question is then basically asking,
- Part 1: What laws support State laws > (trumping) Federal laws (in other words, that states have rights independent of federal laws)
- Part 2: What laws support Federal laws > (trumping) State laws (in other words, that Congress has rights that trump state laws).