<span>Situational is the answer.
Hope this helps !
Photon</span>
Answer:
The correct answer is ''ability to take the role''.
Explanation:
George Herbert Mead was a social psychologist who explained that the human societies in which we are interested are forest societies. The human individual is a self, only insofar as he takes the attitude of the other towards himself. Insofar as that attitude is that of a certain number of others, insofar as he can adopt the organized attitudes of a certain number of others who are cooperating in a common activity, he takes the group's attitudes towards himself, by taking that or those attitudes, is defining the object of the group that which defines and controls response. For Mead this is possible insofar as people are capable of internalizing the behavior of others, we are capable of acting knowing the behavior that others will do. By internalizing the "generalized other", that is, the attitudes of others, the individual behaves in a certain way.
Answer:
the cocktail party effect (pls give me brainliest)
Explanation:
I believe the answer is: A. confirmation bias.
Confirmation bias tend to happen if we keep surrounding ourselves only with the same people who held a certain similarities.Because of confirmation bias, we tend to be determined to seek our news from one specific resource that we know always support our view.
The answer is: After an accident with a red car last month, Giorgio gets nervous when he sees a red car, but not when he sees a red truck or van.
In classical conditioning, stimulus discrimination refers to the stimulus that create different response from you compared to other similar stimulus.
The discrimination could occurs if you experience positive things from the stimulus in the past (which make you addicted) or negative things from that stimulus (which made you traumatized). In Giorgio's case, the stimulus discrimination occurs because he experienced a traumatic experience with a red car, which influence his nervousness every time he see one.