They are smart ,they are helpful, obidient .
<span><span>Newborn: 30-60 breaths per minute
</span><span>Infant 1 to 12 months: 30-60 breaths per minute
</span><span>Toddler 1-2 years: 24-40 breaths per minute
</span><span>Preschooler 3-5 years: 22-34 breaths per minute
</span><span>School-age child 6-12 years: 18-30 breaths per minute
</span><span>Adolescent 13-17 years: 12-16 breaths per minute
</span><span>Adult: 12-18 breaths per minute. Hope this helps!</span></span>
Answer:
Categorical.
Explanation:
DSM (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders) is one of the diagnostic tool published by the American Psychiatric Association. This includes diagnostic and treatment of a particular mental disorder.
The main criticism of DSM is it adherence to the categorical model. The categorical model sees the person as having or not having a mental disorder. There is no degree of disorder.
Thus, the answer is Categorical Model.
A teenager's brain is still only 90-95% developed. During adolescence, the brain strengthens the connections. This is the brain's way of becoming more efficient. Because the prefrontal cortex is still developing, teenagers might rely on a part of the brain called the amygdala to make decisions and solve problems more than adults do. The amygdala is associated with emotions, impulses, aggression and instinctive behavior. These changes are significant because they are crucial to how a teen transfers into adulthood.