habituationHabituation is a mental learning process in infants wherein repeated exposure to a stimulus results in a decreased response to it. In this example, after Melanie presented the infants with the same red light repeatedly, they became "habituated" or familiar with it, after which they lost interest in observing it. Melanie then proceeds to investigate if the infants instead turn their attention to a different colored light (a new stimulus).
Answer:
<h2>Mark me brainliest plz (⌒▽⌒)(⌒▽⌒)</h2>
Explanation:
- <em>The definition of community is all the people living in an area or a group or groups of people who share common interests. ... A group of people living together or in the same locality or who share interests or a sense of </em><em>i</em><em>d</em><em>e</em><em>n</em><em>t</em><em>i</em><em>t</em><em>y</em><em> </em><em>Being a part of a community makes us feel as though we are a part of something greater than ourselves. It gives us opportunities to connect with people, to reach for our goals, to make us feel safe and secure. A true community is about being connected and responsible for what happens.</em>
- <em>A society is a group of individuals involved in persistent social interaction, or a large social group sharing the same spatial or social territory, typically subject to the same political authority and dominant cultural </em><em>expectations</em><em> </em><em>According to sociologists, a society is a group of people with common territory, interaction, and culture. Social groups consist of two or more people who interact and identify with one another. ... Geographic distance and language barriers can separate societies within a country.</em>
1). C
2). D
3). D
hope that helps
Answer:
If you mean the largest continents it would be Asia
Explanation:
Asia is the largest continent/land mass in the world.
Answer: This isn't really understood, because not all societies formed governments in the sense of western hierarchical systems, and not all governments formed under the same conditions. It is one of those mysteries, which means it was a gradual thing, and not a sudden seasonal change from anarchy to government. The first government accumulated within a group of people who spoke the same language, and there was some pressure on them that required some level of organization for the distribution of resources and labor, so it seems, but even as I write this I know that is far too simple.
For thousands of years it was believed there was a natural hegemony bestowed by divine power, then, there was the American Revolution and the idea of government was turned upside down. Following that was Karl Marx, who suggested that government was a mechanism of oppression to control the means of production and wealth accumulation, but all of the hypotheses built from this idea, which most of modern thinking can find some degree of lineage to, are problematic to be nice, and outright failures at the other extreme.
Quick answer is, there are a thousand answers, none of which have proven to be universal, so they are only partially right.
There is a lot of room for research in this area.