Answer: stimulus generalization.
Explanation:
Stimulus generalization can happen in classical conditioning as well as in operant conditioning. When it´s in operant conditioning, stimulus generalization describes the way people learn something in a specific situation and then can apply it to different but similar circumstances.
In this example, Jessi first learned at preschool that to get a snack she has to wash her hands. Instead of having to relearn this practice at home, she applied the same rule she had already learned.
Answer: B: "The information age"
Explanation: "The information age" began in the 20th Century, let us say started around the 1970s. The information age is also called the 'digital age', or 'computer age' which adopts the use of digital computers and digital record keeping processes.
It is a shift from the industrial revolution and is based upon access to 'information technology' where people can easily access 'information' and 'knowledge', thereby making information and knowledge easily disseminated and available.
<span>Assuming that this is referring to the same list of options that was posted before with this question, <span>the correct response would be that Churchill was imploring the British people to "never give in" in terms of their fight with Nazi Germany, since at times this fight seemed almost un-winnable. </span></span>
The women who are more likely to remarry are young mothers and those with no high school.
Young mothers often feel intimidated by having to take care of their children on their own, which is why they often unconsciously seek help from their partners, and start relying on them so much that it is easier for them to just get married again. The same thing goes for those with no high school - often they will want to marry someone who will take care of them.
If Heidi is a self-actualizer, it means that she can fulfill much of her talents and potentials with not a lot of effort. The characteristics that she is likely to possess are the following:
tolerant of others, gentle sense of humor, likely to pursue the greater good; spontaneous, creative, and a childlike capacity for awe; s<span>trong capacity for "peak experiences", and many other qualities. </span>