Answer:
In studies about new medicines, researchers usually give one group of patients the medicine that is designed to treat an illness. They give another group of patients a placebo, which is taken the same way as the medicine but does not actually contain the ingredients of any medicine. Different medicines are tested in different experiments, but the placebos usually contain the same non-medical ingredients. If both groups of patients are healed, then researchers cannot be sure whether the medicine caused improvement, but if the group given the medicine is healed while the group given the placebo remains ill, researchers can conclude that the medicine causes the illness to go away.
In medical experiments, which group receives placebos?
the experimental group
the control group
both the experimental and control groups
neither the experimental nor control group
Explanation:
Answer:
D.
Explanation:
In combinational circuits, the current output values are always the same for the same set of input values, regardless the previous values.
We say that combinational circuits have no memory, or that the circuit has no feedback from the outputs.
For sequential circuits, on the contrary, the current output values are not based in the current input values only, but on the previous output values as well.
So, the fact of having a defined set of input values at a given moment, doesn't guarantee which the output values will be.
We say that sequential circuits have memory, or that they have feedback from the outputs.
Examples of these type of circuits are R-S, J-K, D or T flip-flops.