Experiments are used to psychology to gather observational data that is collected in artificially controlled laboratory conditions. This makes possible to isolate the action/treatment/behaviour we seek to observe from external conditions and to study its effects. In turn, it would be possible to infer casuality relations which are not contaminated by the effects of other variables that could be acting in the real (not controlled) world.
The problem with such experiments is how to generalize the results obtained outside the lab. The behaviour observed there may not happen at all in the real world, or differ in terms of the social conditions of each person's environment: gender, race, religious beliefs, social class, etc.
For example, imagine an experiment in which a woman has to punish one of the other people participating after some interactions. She punishes a man who tried to deceive her. Imagine this woman out of the lab, taking into account that she lives in a very religious patriarchal community. She would never dare to contradict a man in her real world (maybe she would if the social conditions were different). Hence, it could not be concluded that people always act in their better self-interest (punishing the meanest person) in this case, but that sometimes self-interest is conditioned by social surrounding features that are present not in the lab.
<span>The word-skipping technique relies on the fact that it's a good idea to skip unfamiliar words in a passage in order to focus on the main idea of the passage. Basically, to make sure the overall outcome is understanding the entire passage as a whole, it is best to skip the words you are unaware of and analyze them later. Often times, as you read the entire passage in full and grasp the main idea, you are able to make sense of the </span>unfamiliar words.
The right answer is:
What is true about both Germany and Italy leading up to World War II is that
1. Both believed they had rights to lands outside their border
Explanation:
<em>Both Germany and Italy were led at the time by dictators, Adolf Hitler was the leader of the NAZI party and Benito Mussolini as the leader of the National Fascist Party (Partito Nazionale Fascista, PNF) in Italy.</em>
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<em>Hitler sought Lebensraum or "living space" for the Germans in Eastern Europe, his aggressiveness translated to foreign policy is considered the cause of WWII.</em>
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<em>Relations between Germany and Italy improved due to Hitler's support of Mussolini’s invasion of Ethiopia. In 1936, Italy signed the treaty of cooperation with Germany and proclaimed the creation of a Rome–Berlin Axis.</em>
compare an accountant and a vender
accountant : helps persons with money problems
vender : sells but also satisfy customers
both from studies and hard work