Answer: Stimulus generalization
Explanation:
Stimulus generalization is the ability for a conditioned stimulus to evoke similar response after it has been confitioned.
Matt's notification about his dog is called Stimulus generalization.
<span>Conduction is where heat energy is transferred from one thing to another or within it</span>
Answer:
I have 22 warnings and im not capping
Explanation:
The correct option is A.
John B. Watson believed that psychology should be the science of <u>observable behavior.</u>
<h3>What is observable behavior?</h3>
What you can see someone else doing is considered their observable conduct. This encompasses activities like walking, talking, sitting, singing, hugging, eating, sleeping, and other similar activities. Mental and emotional states and acts that cannot be seen in the physical world are examples of unobservable behaviors.
<h3>Who is
John B. Watson ?</h3>
Behaviorism became a recognized psychological school thanks to American psychologist John Broadus Watson, who popularized the scientific theory behind it. Watson promoted this shift in the field of psychology with his 1913 Columbia University speech, Psychology as the Behaviorist Views It.
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I understand that the question you are looking for is :
John B. Watson believed that psychology should be the science of
a. observable behavior.
b. cognitive processes.
c. genetic predispositions.
d. all of these factors.
Aḥmad ibn Mājid ( أحمد بن ماجد), also known as the Lion of the Sea,[1] was an Arab navigator and cartographer born c. 1432[2] in Julfar, part of Oman under the Nabhani dynasty rule at the time,[3][4] (present-day Ras Al Khaimah, United Arab Emirates).[5] He was raised in a family famous for seafaring; at the age of 17 he was able to navigate ships. The exact date is not known, but ibn Majid probably died in 1500. Although long identified in the West as the navigator who helped Vasco da Gama find his way from Africa to India, contemporary research has shown Ibn Majid is unlikely even to have met da Gama.[6] Ibn Majid was the author of nearly forty works of poetry and prose.