Have you ever seen an animal walking sideways, across the sand?
Which of the following is the LEAST important activity when protecting human subjects in international research?
A. Determining if the research might present unique risks to subjects given local socio-economic conditions.
B. Considering local customs, norms, and laws.
C. Assessing transportation conditions
D. Consulting with members of the community from which subjects will be recruited.
Answer:
The least important activity when protecting human subjects in international research is assessing transportation conditions.
Explanation:
- Some of the other important activities when protecting human subjects in international research are determining if the research might present unique risks to subjects given local socio-economic conditions
- Considering local customs, norms, and laws because proper international research should check whether we are following the laws, basic rules and all the other formalities.
- It should be consulting with members of the community from which subjects will be recruited.
- Assessing transportation conditions also important but when we comparing it to the other activities it is least important.
Answer:
Interpretation does not alter what a fact means (it is either raining outside, or it is not), but interpretation places the fact in a context and attempts to explain its significance. Interpretation helps provide a conclusion based on the fact or sometimes a reason for the fact.
Explanation:
Answer:
is this all of the question?
Explanation:
For Odysseus and his men, the loss of Helios, the sun, symbolizes a loss of C. Hope.
In poetry, light ( such as the sun, the moon, candles, stars) often symbolizes good, hope, and freedom.
In the lines <em>"Never the flaming eye of Helios lights on those men at morning, when he climbs the sky of stars, nor in descending earthward out of heaven" </em>the reflected idea is that they do not see the sunrise or sunset anymore, thus they are eventually condemned to a total loss of light, that is to say, hope.