"Toward the end of the first year, infants use patterns of rising and falling intonation that resemble the sounds of adult speech."
<em>Intonation</em> is the way the pitch of the voice goes up and down as you speak.
Reproducing adult intonations is one of the ways young children pick up the speech patterns in the language which is spoken at home, even before they know how to formulate sentences. It is the result of the imprint of their parents' speech on their memory. Therefore, when the child then prattles using this intonation, it may sound like they are babbling in their parents' language.
<span>The number of suicide attempts among high schoolers that require medical treatment drops 50 percent from 9th grade to 12th grade. Suicide attempts may be attributed to social or peer pressure worsened by the pressure held by the social media in the adolescent minds of these students today where everyone always almost knows your whereabouts.</span>
Answer:
<em>C) dissociative amnesia.</em>
Explanation:
<em>Dissociative amnesia is a form of dissociative disorder</em> that includes <em>not being able to recall substantial private information which would normally not be lost with normal forgetting. </em>
Generally <em>it is triggered by trauma or anxiety</em>. After ruling out other causes of amnesia, diagnosis is based on history.