This is semantic memory.
Semantic memory actually refers to your 'general knowledge' - the information that you know about the world in general. The grandfather's semantic memory is quite strong and it doesn't seem to decline, which is why he is still so good at solving crossword puzzles. This refers to knowledge and memory that we accumulate throughout our lives.
Genocide Watch in the U.S. and the Green Belt Movement in Kenya are examples of <u>"Nongovernmental Organizations".</u>
The Green Belt Movement (GBM) was established by Professor Wangari Maathai in 1977 under the sponsorship of the National Council of Women of Kenya (NCWK) to react to the necessities of provincial Kenyan ladies who announced that their streams were becoming scarce, their nourishment supply was less secure, and they needed to walk further and further to get kindling for fuel and fencing.
Genocide Watch exists to anticipate, counteract, stop, and rebuff decimation and different types of mass murder. Our motivation is to fabricate a worldwide development to counteract and stop genocide.
Answer:
The 49th parallel north as a border between the Canadian provinces of British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba (to the north), and the U.S. states of Washington, Idaho, Montana, North Dakota and Minnesota (to the south)
Explanation:
Theirs letter a. I think that’s the answer.
Generalizing from research, we can predict that the presence of others will INCREASE performance on well-learned tasks and DECREASE <span>performance on novel or challenging tasks.
in doing we're doing a well-learned task, our brain could complete it with less focus, so having the presence of others will give no trouble to our task.
But, in challenging tasks, our brain need more focus to complete it, so the presence of others will be more likely to cause nervousness that lead to a decrease in performance</span>