Answer:
Van Gogh
Explanation:
<u>The exhibition referenced in the question is "Meet Vincent van Gogh", interactive installation exhibition that opened in London in early February. </u>
<u>The audio guide that accompanies it started a debate because the artist's name is pronounced "Van Go", like it would be pronounced in America, rather than Britain version "Van Gof". </u>
The Dutch version is more like "Van Khokh", but this event showed the name is differently pronounced in each country - <em>Gof </em>in Britan, <em>Go </em>in the US, <em>Gog</em> in France, etc.
That’s an easy easy yes. There should be a private investigator on her. Brainliest easy
The assistant chief of police has decided to forego using the polygraph test on a suspect and will use a different technique to assess the suspect's physiological responses to crime-scene details. This is known as the guilty knowledge test.
<u>Explanation:</u>
The Guilty Knowledge Tests (GKT's) refers a psycho-physiological survey method that could be used in a polygraph test to find whether suspects are hiding "guilt" by measuring their physiological answers to multiple choice questions.
50 participants were randomly selected to commit one of two real false crimes. Later they were tried with GKT for crimes and things they did not know about. Using the best scoring systems, as per logistic regression analysis, this test correctly classifies 84% innocent and to 76% criminals.
Answer: Some people were treated equally, but not everyone was.
Explanation: