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spin [16.1K]
2 years ago
14

Do the amount of water changes during inhalation(inspiration) and exhalation(expiration)?​

Biology
2 answers:
Shkiper50 [21]2 years ago
6 0

Answer:

When you inhale (breathe in).

Explanation:

Air enters your lungs and oxygen from the air moves from your lungs to your blood. At the same time, carbon dioxide, a waste gas, moves from your blood to the lungs and is exhaled (breathe out). This process is called gas exchange and is essential to life.

Zinaida [17]2 years ago
3 0

Answer:

expiration exhalation

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desert animals would generally be expected to have less body fat than animals in cooler environments. please select the best ans
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How many generations did it take modern man to leave Africa and penetrate every corner of the globe?
Juliette [100K]

Answer:

See explanation section

Explanation:

Though The first Homo Sapiens were born about 200,000 years ago, the modern man left Africa 60,000 years ago to penetrate every corner of the world. It is hard to find that the distance and time of their travel. According to the anthropologist and paleontologist, the human took nearly six hundred generations to leave their African homeland to settle the world. It is also known as ‘’The great human migration’’.

Here is the source: The Genographic Project, National Geographic Smithsonian Magazine, University of Oxford.

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4 years ago
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4 0
3 years ago
How does someone achieve a unified self?
lesantik [10]

Answer:

please mark me as brain list

Explanation:

The unified self is a flawed construct. Experience changes us, even at the core. People change us just by being with us. It doesn't have to be a long term relationship. Our minds may not have the plasticity they once had but we adapt daily to the people around us and, in a slower fashion, tide rather than waves rather than ripples, we the ebb and flow of experience changes the "I think" that creates our values and judgements, which changes the experiences we seek then have which again works on the way we view the world.

A possible reason we are able to change when we are with different types of people is that we have a certain number of roles at our disposal. I've noticed this, on an extreme level, with some coworkers. I wondered how they could change so much when they got to the office. They'd suddenly become very business-like and at first I thought they were play acting. They were, in a sense, but I believe their identity changed when they walked through the office door. They were no longer the guy or girl I'd just ridden to work with, they were such and such part of the hierarchy and their behavior wasn't all a put on, though some of everyone's behavior in every role is, it was who they were then.

It took being asked to take a work related personality test that clued me in. The test results came back. One part of results outlined our scores for introversion/extroversion scores at home and at work. The scale was -50 to +50 where the score determined one's level of introversion (-) or extraversion (+). I scored -33 at home and a +33 at work. The automatic scoring algorithm suggested that it was likely I was under a lot of internal stress because of this. I was. I used to have dry heaves when I transitioned from work to home. That part of the results wasn't the only part rang true though so I took it seriously.

How close the roles we play with different people are to each other might be an indicator of how unified we are. If you were to scale our unification factor from 0 to 1 I would have been considered a 0.33 based on my introversion/extraversion scores, if that was the only score that mattered. More things the behavior than others matters, of course. Perhaps people who are very different in differing situations experience more cognitive dissonance. It would be interesting knowing.

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2 years ago
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