conditioned stimulus
In classical conditioning<span>, a conditioned stimulus is one which is previously a neutral stimulus, which, upon becoming associated with an unconditioned stimulus, eventually triggers a conditioned response.
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An unconditioned stimulus is one which <span>unconditionally, naturally, and automatically elicits or triggers a(n) (unconditioned) response. For example, the smell of food usually triggers hunger.
In contrast, a conditioned stimulus is one which initially does not trigger the same response as the unconditioned stimulus, but because of association, eventually triggers the same response as well. The response to a conditioned stimulus is a conditioned response.
For example, in the famous experiment by Ivan Pavlov, the sound of a bell was paired with the serving of food to dogs. Dogs naturally salivate upon smelling/seeing the food. However, later on, even without the food, when the dogs heard the sound of the bell, they began salivating. The sound of the bell is the conditioned stimulus, while the salivation of the dog in response to the conditioned stimulus, the bell, is called a conditioned response. </span>
Answer:
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The correct answer would be C. Increased Population. This is because there are more people coming into the country, which increases population.
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Those students used the central route to persuasion, and were influenced by the quality of the persuasive argument.
<h3>What is a persuasive argument?</h3>
This is the type of argument that the person arguing engages in because they want to get the other party to see their point of view.
The goal is to ensure that the person you are talking to buys your idea and works with it. The way people go about this argument is through the use of logic and reasoning.
The goal is to try to be able to get the other person to adopt your pattern of reasoning and also take action based on that.
This can be referred to as a call to action by appealing to the emotions and the reasoning of your audience.
Read more on persuasive argument here
brainly.com/question/1790640
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Answer:
Option D “Communities in the real world are more appropriate”.
Explanation:
Regarding behavior, cyber communities promotes an effect known as ‘Online disinhibition effect’, in which virtual users feel less constraints in regards with their manners, feeling free to express with no filters, all increased by some elements exclusive from this platform (being anonymous, not feeling the response of the attacks to other person, invisibility, lack of importance on feelings on others, cyberbullying, not being responsible of what one says).