Answer:
1. What is the unconditioned stimulus? b. the old mayo
2. What is the unconditioned response? Getting sick.
3. What is the neutral stimulus that becomes the conditioned stimulus? The mention of a tuna sandwich
4. What is the conditioned response? Nausea.
Explanation:
- An unconditioned stimulus is one that triggers a response, a reaction, naturally, automatically. Feeling sick after eating spoiled mayonnaise is a natural response of our bodies. Therefore, in this case, the old mayo is the unconditioned stimulus that caused the reaction.
- The unconditioned response is precisely the natural, automatic reaction we have to a stimulus. In this case, getting sick is the unconditioned response.
- The tuna sandwich, before the episode with the old mayo, was a neutral stimulus. It did not cause any particular reaction upon being mentioned. However, Ryan associated the sandwich he ate - the one with bad mayo - with the feeling of sickness he had afterwards. Now, the tuna sandwich has become a conditioned stimulus, making him feel nauseous.
- Finally, the nausea Ryan feels is the conditioned response, that is, the reaction he has to the conditioned stimulus.
The answer is Bill of rights. The Bill of Rights came to fruition principally in light of Jefferson. The Bill of Rights speaks to the principal changes to the Constitution and mirror Jefferson's perspectives on legislative issues and power.
Im pretty sure it would be D because <span>he South didn't industrialize. Their economy was based on cotton, tobacco, and slaves. So they had to import almost everything, and thus they payed more in tariffs than any other section.</span>
According to Freud, Jerrold pulled <span>the information into the conscious mind because he is still aware of his feelings and expressing them to a friend.</span>
The correct answer is the person-situation debate.
The person-situation debate is a common topic of discussion by s<span>ocial-cognitive psychologists. Those who support the "person" debate argue that individual and innate traits and characteristics of a person determine his or her behavior. On the other hand, those who support the "situation" debate (situationists) argue that people's behavior varies considerably across different situations, and due to this innate factors do not have strong associations with human behavior. </span>