Immediately after Holly's baby was born, he was whisked away to a corner of the room where the doctor and several other people performed an assessment of his vital signs known as the __________.
A. Apgar scale
B. Brazelton Neonatal Behavioral Assessment Scale
C. triple screen test
D. implantation report
Answer: A
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Which of the following is a disadvantage of aversive therapies used to treat substance abuse?
A. They are not based on sound psychological principles. B. There is not a lot of data on their effectiveness, because the techniques have only been recently developed. C. The client knows that the nausea is produced by something other than the addictive substance. D. The client doesn't experience an aversive outcome in all cases.
Tissue damage is transduced by:
A) thermoreceptors. B) the spinal cord C) pain receptors. D) the somatosensory cortex.
Failure to match one's behavior to widely accepted norms or to the usual minimum rules for social conduct describes the definition of normality referred to as __________
Fill in the blank(s) with correct word
Layla is a white student in her second year at a Christian college. She was raised in a religious home and was an excellent student. Her family is warm and close. She avoided risky behaviors and maintained an optimistic attitude in the years leading up to college. If Layla's religious development follows a typical path, what can she expect?
A. She is likely to continue to believe what her parents have taught her to believe without question throughout college. B. She is likely to experience a decline in religious commitment and acceptance during college. C. Her sense of well-being is likely to decrease in older adulthood. D. Her religiosity is likely to stabilize in middle adulthood and remain at the same level in older adulthood.