Jocelyn is working in a nursing home and has noticed that when engaged in therapy, Mr. Smith is disinterested and inconsistent in improving his walking while in the therapy gym. She has decided to walk with him to the dining room and the recreation room rather than in the gym. Since she started this, Mr. Smith seems more engaged and he initiates walking more on his own outside of the therapy
session. This is an example of:
a. An open loop form of motor learning
b. Sensorimotor praxis
c. Metalinguistic reasoning
d. Situated learning
d
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The model of aging for high-caste Hindu women from the Oriya culture in Orissa, India, consists of which outcome?
A. life in her grandfather's house (bapa gharo) B. maintaining her childhood home (balapana ghara) C. physical changes that are ultimately debilitating (lorem ipsum) D. life in her husband's mother's house (sasu gharo)
When solving problems, highly intelligent people use ______ regions of their brain and metabolize ______ glucose
a. smaller; less c. larger; less b. smaller; more d. larger; more
What can we conclude from studying PET and fMRI studies of emotion and brain activation?
a. Specific emotions consistently activate specific areas. b. Places activated during a given emotion cluster in certain areas, but are also scattered across wide areas of the brain. c. There is no discernible pattern of brain activation for most emotions. d. The findings support the localization of function approach.
Sampling without replacement can be used to select a simple random sample so long as ______.
A. the population size is small B. the population size is large C. the sample is selected at random D. the population is accessible