Answer:
The structural immaturity of the infant brain makes it unlikely that such emotions can be experienced in the first year.
Explanation:
According Jerome Kagan, the brain of an infant under the age of one is still immature and, for that reason, incapable of feelings that require thought (such as, guilt, pride, despair, same, empathy, and jealousy). When a one-year-old responds to an emotional incentive, it is either with a biologically prepared response or with acquired habits. A three-year-old child, on the other hand, is capable of those feelings because she is now able to infer the state of others and to be aware of her own emotions.
<u>Answer:
</u>
'An air puff in the eye elicits an eye blink' is the statement that illustrates a US-UR pair.
Option: (B)
<u>Explanation:
</u>
- When an event generates an unconditioned stimulus, it is often followed by an unconditioned response spontaneously.
- This kind of stimulus is usually unavoidable and makes the subject vulnerable to respond in a specific manner that is expected for the type of stimulus received.
- The correlation between US and UR is characterized by the input-output link that is apparent in any given event.
By the end of the bloody, all-day battle, Harold was dead and his forces were destroyed. He was the last Anglo-Saxon king of England, as the battle changed the course of history and established the Normans as the rulers of England, which in turn brought about a significant cultural transformation.