The correct answer is He should turn on the light before he drops the food into the tank.
Classical conditioning is a type of learning in which an organism learns to transfer a natural response to a stimulus, to another initially neutral stimulus, which then becomes conditioned. This process occurs through the association between the two stimuli (unconditioned and neutral).
For classical conditioning to be generated, the neutral stimulus must be presented first and a few seconds later the unconditioned stimulus (the process must be repeated several times), so that there can be an association.
Another concept is reinforcement, which means pairing followed by conditioned and unconditioned stimuli, which, if not done, tends to decrease conditioned responses and may lead to extinction, that is, until they disappear.
To to protect the family and pay the Bill and bring food to the table
Pardon.
A governor may release a person from the legal consequences of a crime by invoking his power to pardon.
<u>The answer is "Tolerance for Ambiguity".</u>
Tolerance for ambiguity can be characterized as how much an individual is OK with vulnerability, unusualness, clashing bearings, and various requests. Fundamentally, tolerance for ambiguity is show in a man's capacity to work successfully in a dubious domain. The degree of vagueness may differ significantly and is by and large connected to the hidden reason for vulnerability.
In the 20's the U.S. was trying "to be the world's banker, food producer, and manufacturer, but to buy as little as possible from the world in return." This attempt to have a constant favorable trade balance wouldn't succeed for long. The U.S. maintained high trade barriers to protect American business, but the U.S. wouldn't buy from our European counterparts, so there's no way for them to buy from the Americans, or pay interest on U.S. loans. The weakness of the international economy certainly contributed to the Great Depression. Europe was reliant upon U.S. loans to buy U.S. goods, and the U.S. needed Europe to buy these goods to prosper. By the year 1929, 10% of American gross national product went into exports. When the foreign countries became no longer able to buy U.S. goods, U.S. exports fell 30% overnight. That $1.5 billion of foreign sales lost between 1929 to 1933 was fully one-eighth of all lost American sales in the early years of the depression.