Yes, I once had a bad dream where I was trapped in an underground cave. At first I did not know where I was. It was very dark and small, and I could hear water dripping. I was very scared, and immediately started trying to look for a way out. I could not find any sources of light, so I started pressing up against the walls, hoping that there would be a hole somewhere. I remember feeling as if the cave was getting smaller and smaller, until it was so cramped that I could not move. Instead of panicking further, I lay still, and slowly the cave started expanding again, until I could see a pinprick of light above me. I pushed and pushed until I could claw my way out of the top, but as I reached it, the whole thing collapsed under me and I felt the sensation of falling. I woke up with a fright.
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Answer:
a. after; at the same time as
Explanation:
According to the James-Lange theory, we experience emotion <em>after</em> we notice our physiological arousal. According to the Cannon-Bard theory, we experience emotion <em>at the same time as we</em> become physiologically aroused. In James-Lange theory, a stimulus is the cause of the arousal of our body's physiological response. So according to this theory, physiological arousal is first and then we feel the emotion. According to Cannon-Bard's theory, also known as the thalamic theory of emotion, both the emotion and the physiological arousal happen simultaneously.
If you look, you can see in 1998, it shows males getting into more fatal accidents. However, in 2008, it seems as though there are more females who get into accidents. The only thing I've noticed is how they don't state whether some of these people had caused the accident or died in the accident.