Mr. Knez is trying to get his seven-year-old daughter to eat some vegetable-fried rice for the first time. Mr. Knez should be MOST successful in getting his daughter to sample the new dish if he
a. tells his daughter she won't get any desert until she tries some of the fried rice.
b. eats some of the fried rice first and shows a favorable reaction while he eats it.
c. carefully describes all the ingredients that are in the fried rice.
d. mixes it in with some other food that she enjoys eating.
B
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The neurodevelopmental hypothesis of schizophrenia asserts that all of the following are associated with an increased vulnerability to schizophrenia EXCEPT
a. prenatal malnutrition. b. prenatal viral infection. c. repeated concussions in childhood. d. obstetrical complications at birth.
Which of the following is the best example of individualism?
a. Staying with one’s parents after graduating high school or college. b. Striving to attain an executive position at a company. c. Attending a community or church event. d. Working with fellow students to fill out a study guide to get a good grade.
David lost a foot when an explosive detonated under his Humvee during an Army convoy mission in Iraq. While recovering in a hospital, David's physician warned him that he might experience "phantom pain.". This means that David may a. experience a sensation of pain that seems to originate in his missing foot
b. experience vivid flashbacks of his combat injury. c. experience pain in his remaining foot. d. continue to feel pain in his injured leg, as this type of injury never fully heals.
Asch is well known for what is apparently a simple group perceptual task: selecting which, of three lines, matched another line in length. What did Asch do to make this simple task not so simple?
a. Only one person in the group was an experimental “subject;” the rest were confederates who were told in advance to make the same incorrect response. b. Another subject, in an adjacent room, administered electric shocks to individuals who gave incorrect answers. c. Asch paid participants $100 for getting the entire group to agree with them on the correct response. d. Asch secretly administered perception-altering drugs to participants.