I don't see the picture so i can't answer your question
Answer:
Memory is a component of the brain where new information and old information are stored and can be retrieved very quickly.
There are two major types of memory:
1. Long-term memory
2. Short-term memory.
The Long-term memory is the place where information have been stored for a long time. This memory is what makes you remember your name, your house address, your favorite food, your class mate's names and other information.
The short-term memory on the other hand is the type of memory that stores events or information for only a short period of time. This explains why you can be introduced to five people, but ten minutes later, you only remember one name, or no names at all!
Events or memories that are in the Short-term memory can be made to enter the long term memory with the help of some techniques.
When capsaicin – the chemical in spicy foods that makes them so hot, Hot, HOT – hits your tongue, your body registers the sensation as pain. This in turn triggers the release of endorphins, otherwise known as “happy” chemicals that give you an instant head-to-toe feeling of pleasure.
Stage 1
Low
Growth
<span> Very high CBR, Very high CDR, <span>Very low NIR
Stage 2
High Growth
High CBR, Rapidly declining CDR, Very high NIR
Stage 3
Moderate Growth
Rapidly declining CBR, Moderately declining CDR, Moderate NIR
Stage 4
Low Growth
Very low CBR, Low or slightly increasing CDR, zero or negative NIR</span></span>
Answer: Eysenck's theory of personality focused on two dimensions of higher-order traits, extraversion vs. introversion and emotional stability vs. neuroticism, or emotional instability. Extraverts are commonly known as being loud and outgoing while introverts are often thought of as quiet and reserved
Explanation: