Answer:
1, 4 & 6 are likely to be correct
Explanation:
1 When the target group is American adults, who very often have landline telephones and cellphones, it can be argued that including them will be more accurate.
4 This may be true; I can imagine that there are people, socioeconomically different, who don´t have (access to) landline phones.
6. Birthday doesn´t have anything to do with age, as suggested in nr. 5 and nr. 7. Birthyear does. The selection of most recent birthday in a household is a good way of selecting at random.
2, 3 and 8 are statements that don´t have any scientifical reasoning.
Answer:
According to current research, if you were to make and hold the facial expression associated with surprise for about 10 seconds, your body would begin to produce arousal that would be unique to that emotion.
Explanation:
Studies by psychologists have shown that facial expressions have the (limited) power to affect one's mood. If a person smiles, which is a common expression of someone who is feeling happy, happiness can be elicited. Of course, if a person is going through a difficult moment, such as the loss of a relative, simply forcing a smile won't make that person stop mourning. Still, the studies prove that mood can be influenced by facial expressions.
A certain university study had participants obey to commands. They weren't told which feeling they were supposed to be triggering. They obeyed commands such as "raise your eyebrows" or "open your eyes wide." What researchers found is that participants ended up feeling what that expression was associated to. Therefore, if the researcher command facial expressions related to fear, participants would feel fear even though they weren't aware of the expression being one of fear.
That energy is not created nor destroyed it is only transferred
Working class such as miners, farmers, and city workers. and Royal class kings queens stuff like that.
Because they provide a predictable income