The statement that anaerobic and aerobic exercises are important in developing cardiorespiratory fitness is true. The difference between these two types of physical activity is the intensity, interval and types of muscle fibers incorporated. Aerobic exercise as any activity that uses large muscle groups, can be maintained continuously and is rhythmic in nature, while anaerobic exercise is an intense physical activity of very short duration, with contracting muscles and independent of the use of inhaled oxygen as an energy source. However, both of them have different goals and good for our health.
Forensic science is the application of science to criminal and civil laws
Answer:
D. Becoming dark or moody
Explanation:
Extreme changes in moods
Answer:
Extinction
Explanation:
For example, your dog will naturally salivate at he sight of food, but if you train your dog to salivate when you ring a bell when presenting food to it, the dog overtime associates the bell with food, and would salivate anytime you ring a bell even without presenting its food.
The salivation that is stimulated by the ringing of the bell even in the absence of food is the conditioned response.
The ringing of the bell is the conditioned stimulus, while the food that naturally initiates salivation is the unconditioned stimulus.
Overtime, if you keep ringing the bell (conditioned stimulus) only without presenting food (unconditioned stimulus), your dog would gradually stop salivating without sighting food. This reduction or decrease in the conditioned response (salivating) is what is referred to as extinction.
B. A health care appointment
Explanation: If we have any consultation scheduled to meet a doctor, then it is a healthcare appointment. Doctors are the ones who looks after the issues pertaining in our body and treats them accordingly. We need to take an appointment to meet a doctor and we don’t encounter the doctor. Along with that, we do not have an appointment at the doctor rather we have an appointment with a doctor. Congruent care is based on evidences.