That person is experiencing
"Stagnation".
Stagnation is the condition of being still, or not moving,
similar to a sitting puddle of water where stagnation draws insects etc. In psychological
terms Stagnation alludes to the inability to figure out how to contribute.
Generativity versus stagnation is the seventh of eight phases of Erik Erikson's
hypothesis of psychosocial improvement.
An individual who could trace a picture of a bicycle with his or her finger but could not recognize it as a bicycle is most likely to have sustained damage to the visual association area.
Explanation:
Visual association or association cortex area is the cortical area present in between the auditory, visual, somatosensory cortices.
All these cortices integrate through sensory, gustatory, visual, and auditory impulses. This complete sensory integration aids to recognize shapes, form, image, texture of various objects and their interrelation through higher-order association.
Damage to this visual association areas cause associative visual agnosia. With this condition, a person although is able to see or feel an object cannot recognize the object due to impairment of attention/recognition skill, intelligence.
A visually agnostic person, although can see, cannot identify an object by his/her sight; but can feel the object through touch, smell, or sound.
B.basins being drained by river systems
The correct answer is "Prisioners" . The HHS regulations, 45 CFR part 46, include four subparts, two of which established the vulnerable populations that it aims to provide additional protection. Subpart B mentions the ones stated in the question, while subpart C mentions prisioners as other vulnerable population that HSS regulations offers additional protection.
Many people contributed to the deciphering of the Egyptian Hieroglyphs,
but the final and most deciding contribution was done by Jean-Francois
Champollion, a French scholar, who was able to compare the Egyptian
script to a text in the known Greek one thanks to the discovery of
Rosetta Stone, a stone with the same text in three languages: two types
of Egyptian and the known Greek one