Answer:
Increasing Age. The majority of people who die of coronary heart disease are 65 or older. ...
Male gender. ...
Heredity (including race) ...
Tobacco smoke. ...
High blood cholesterol. ...
High blood pressure. ...
Physical inactivity. ...
Obesity and being overweigh
The Inland Rules specifies that red buoys must be passed on the
starboard side upon going upstream. The red buoys will mark the right side (starboard
side) at inbound direction. It should be placed on the left side (port side) of the channel when going outbound.
Answer:
the tone is the neutral stimulus
Explanation:
In classical conditioning, as first experimented by Pavlov in his experiment with dogs, the bell that was presented initially was the neutral stimulus which was not capable of eliciting salivation alone. He later paired the neutral stimulus (the bell), with the unconditioned stimulus (meat powder) which naturally elicited salivation. The neutral stimulus then became associated with the unconditioned stimulus to eventually trigger salivation when presented alone.
In the situation of the rat of which Mark wants to train it by applying classical conditioning technique, the tone is the neutral stimulus. Except it is paired with the unconditional stimulus which naturally would make the rat blink, it would only attract the attention of the rat without making it to blink.
That is false. Physical characteristics of an organism are genetically passed down.
—Evidence—
A characteristic that an organism can pass on to its offspring through its genes.
The set of information that controls a trait; a segment of DNA on a chromosone that codes for a specific trait.
Heredity is the biological process responsible for passing on physical traits from one generation to another.
A cross between a diploid individual and a tetraploid individual produces triploid offspring. There are many species of plants that are triploid, but those come from crosses between two triploid individuals. In those cases, the chromosomes from one parent match up with the chromosomes from the other parent just fine. The same is not true with a cross of a tetraploid and a diploid. In that case, one third of the chromosomes are unmatch, causing many offspring to die, to be sterile, or to be generally unfit. Long story short, the answer you seek is False.