A shift of the aggregate demand curve from ad1 to ad0 might be caused by a(n) increase in investment spending.
<h3>What is a demand curve?</h3>
In economics, a demand curve is a graph that depicts the relationship between the price of a given good and the quantity desired at that price. Demand curves can be used to analyze the relationship between quantity and price for both a single client and for all customers in a specific market.
The law of demand states that when the price of a particular good rises, the quantity required falls, all other things being equal. This is shown by the demand curve moving downward from the left to the right.
The price is implied to be the independent variable in this formulation, and the quantity to be the dependent variable. Economics is an exception to the general norm that the independent variable appears on the horizontal or x-axis.
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Answer:
I will choose interview because I can ask my teacher the things which i don't know and can get more information about teacher life success and struggle as well
Answer:
law of effect
Explanation:
Thorndike referred to this as the law of effect. In simple terms, Thorndike explains that if a certain stimulus/behavior has a favorable consequence, the subject will want to repeat this behavior. If it continues to have a favorable consequence then the subject will continue to repeat this behavior until it becomes a continuous pattern. The opposite applies to behaviors that have unfavorable consequences, the subject in question will associate the unfavorable consequence with the behavior and cease performing the behavior. The worse the consequence, the faster the subject will stop the behavior.
It is called experimenter bias
experimenter bias refers to the cognitive bias that held by researchers that might cause them to subconsciously influence the outcome of the experiment.
The most likelt cause of this bias is a situation where experimenters held a certain belief or expectation for the outcome of the experiment.