Answer:
indulgent
Explanation:
Permissive parenting, also known as indulgent parenting, is a parenting style characterized by high responsiveness and low demandingness.
This is a parenting style in which the parents is highly involved with his/her children but places few demands or controls on them. They place much priority in meeting the childs emotional needs but very slow in enforcing boundaries.
Answer: Conditioned stimulus.
Fear conditioning refers to a learning behaviour in which an aversive stimulus is paired with a neutral stimulus, up to the point in which the neutral stimulus elicits the same response as the aversive one, even when not paired together.
Before the experiences, the doctor was a <u>neutral stimulus</u> because his effect did not depend on previous experience. The <u>aversive stimulus</u> was the shots. The pairing of the doctor with the shots repeatedly elicits the <u>conditional response</u>, which is the crying. It also turns the doctor into a <u>conditioned stimulus</u>.
The answer is a Natural Experiment.
A natural experiment takes place in natural settings and are used when independent variables can't be manipulated directly for ethical/practical reasons, so in this case the toddlers playing. Any effect observed happens naturally. They aren't seen as true experiments as the independent variable (toddlers playing) hasn't been changed deliberately to see effect on dependent variable (aggressiveness).
The correct answer is the person-situation debate.
The person-situation debate is a common topic of discussion by s<span>ocial-cognitive psychologists. Those who support the "person" debate argue that individual and innate traits and characteristics of a person determine his or her behavior. On the other hand, those who support the "situation" debate (situationists) argue that people's behavior varies considerably across different situations, and due to this innate factors do not have strong associations with human behavior. </span>