Answer:
the rebound effect; thought suppression
Explanation:
The rebound effect: Also known as the rebound phenomenon.
It is defined as the occurrence or re-occurrence of symptoms that were either controlled or absent while being on medication, yet appears again when that particular medication is reduced, or discontinued in dosage.
Suppression In psychology is defined as the act of resisting oneself from feeling or thinking something. It is considered ineffective because even if a person suppresses his or her emotions, such as anger, the same feeling returns with a retaliation. And, this is what is known as the rebound effect.
The same is happening in the case of Cynthia, even if her teacher asks her not to think about the purple unicorns, she couldn't stop herself thinking for the same.
We will anaylze this scenario with the help of operant conditioning, which is a type of learning in which behavior is strengthened if followed by a reinforcer or diminished if followed by a punisher. Reinforcer is any event that strengthens the behavior it follows.
Skinner states that "Beahvior is determined and controlled by the stimuli that are present in a given situation"
According to Skinner, when you take an aspirin for your headache, taking the aspirin is a negative reinforcer whereas the headache is an operant.
China's emperors generally approach global trade during the early
years of the Ming dynasty was
A. They avoided trade and cultural contact with other civilizations
Explanation:
China was a society that was very isolationist and believed their ways to be superior enough to not engage in much cultural or social exchange outside of their own nation.
This was something that materializes much more in the Ming dynasty as the rulers even decreased trade with the outside world which was something that China had always been open for.
This close off of china led for the colonial powers to force it into trade eventually after hundreds of years of isolation.
The Easter Island<span> statues, or moai, are enormous stone figures placed along the coastline as if surveying the island's interior lands. One of archaeology's greatest mysteries is what </span>happened to the Rapa Nui<span> of </span>Easter Island<span>. ... For centuries, observers believed that the </span>Rapa Nui<span> suffered a catastrophic population crash.</span>