Solving poverty is complex and involves lots of aspects, but at its core it is about enabling people to make a reasonable living.
As poverty is created by the way that society and the economy operate, it can only be fully solved by changing these big issues.
Example : Creating more accessible jobs. Improving education and training so that people are able to ensure their hospitality. We need to have good jobs that offer a reasonable level of pay and conditions to help people work their way out of poverty. It’s also about ensuring that the welfare system provides a safety net that catches/helps people in need.
While we need structural solutions, they do little to help individuals and families struggling right now to manage and escape from poverty.
Example : We need social services to reduce the impacts of poverty (i.e libraries and health care) and enable people to find a way to improve their circumstances. The Commission recognises that, while such support will not prevent poverty reoccurring and affecting others, it is a vital part of the solution for those affected by poverty.
Answer:
stimulus discrimination
Explanation:
Mrs. Ridcully probably attempted that her conditioning (her own specific whistle) would eventually be generalized and other similar stimulus (dog owner's whistle) would generate the same conditioned response, but she failed. Instead, the dog discriminates Mrs. Ridcully's whistle from other people's whistle and will only respond to her.
Stimulus discrimination happens when the subject is able to differentiate between different stimuli, and will only respond to an specific stimulus.
I only because i don't think that anything else is right.
Binocular cues include stereopsis, eye convergence, disparity, and yielding depth from binocular vision through exploitation of parallax. Monocular cues include size: distant objects subtend smaller visual angles than near objects, grain, size, and motion parallax.